Beholding considers the spatially situated encounter between artwork and spectator. It argues that artworks created for specific places or conditions structure a reciprocal encounter, which is completed by the presence of a beholder. These are works which demand the 'beholder's share', but not, as Ernst Gombrich famously claimed, to sustain an illusion. Rather, Beholding reconfigures Gombrich's notion of the beholder's share as a set of 'licensed' imaginative and cognitive projections.
Each chapter frames a particular work of art from the remit of a complementary theoretical text. The book establishes a transhistorical notion of the spatially situated encounter, and considers the role of the architectural host in bringing the beholder's orientation into play. The book engages a diverse range of practices: from Renaissance painting and group portraiture to intermedia practices of installation and performance art. Written within the broad remit of reception aesthetics, the book proposes a phenomenological theory of beholding, argued through an in-depth examination of artworks and their spatial contexts, selected for their explanatory potential. These various encounters allocate different constitutive roles to the beholder, bringing not only spatial and temporal orientation into play, but also a repertoire of anticipated ideas and beliefs.
Author(s): Ken Wilder
Publisher: Bloomsbury Visual Arts
Year: 2020
Language: English
Commentary: downloaded from SoftArchive (sanet.st)
Cover
Half Title
Title
Copyright
Dedication
Contents
Plates
Figures
Preface
Acknowledgements
Introduction
Part I Sacred Imagery
Chapter 1 The Beholder as Witness
Chapter 2 Of Clouds and Terrestrial Beholders
Chapter 3 The Melancholic Beholder
Part II Group Portraiture
Chapter 4 The Artist as Beholder
Chapter 5 Two Modes of Beholding
Chapter 6 Theatricality and the Beholder
Part III Abstraction
Chapter 7 Beholding a ‘Reversible’ Space
Chapter 8 Virtual Space and the ‘Literal’ Beholder
Chapter 9 On Repetition and Beholding
Part IV Intermedia
Chapter 10 The Complicit Beholder
Chapter 11 The Beholder in the Expanded Field
Chapter 12 The Dislocated Beholder
Bibliography
Index