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Confronting Images:

Questioning the Ends of a Certain History of Art
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When the French edition of Confronting Images appeared in 1990, it won immediate acclaim because of its far-reaching arguments about the structure of images and the histories ascribed to them by scholars and critics working in the tradition of Vasari and Panofsky. According to Didi-Huberman, visual representation has an “underside” in which seemingly intelligible forms lose their clarity and defy rational understanding. Art historians, he goes on to contend, have failed to engage this underside, where images harbor limits and contradictions, because their discipline is based upon the assumption that visual representation is made up of legible signs and lends itself to rational scholarly cognition epitomized in the “science of iconology.”

To escape from this cul-de-sac, Didi-Huberman suggests that art historians look to Freud’s concept of the “dreamwork,” not for a code of interpretation, but rather to begin to think of representation as a mobile process that often involves substitution and contradiction. Confronting Images also offers brilliant, historically grounded readings of images ranging from the Shroud of Turin to Vermeer’s Lacemaker.


Contents
 
 
 
List of Illustrations
 
Translator's Preface
 
 
 
Question Posed
 
When we pose our gaze to an art image (1) Question posed to a tone of certainty (2) Question posed to a Kantian tone, to some magic words, and to the status of a knowledge (5) The very old requirement of figurability (7)
 
 
 
1. The History of Art Within the Limits of Its Simple Practice
 
 
 
Looking intently at a patch/whack of white wall: the visible, the legible, the visual, the virtual
 
 
 
The requirement of the visual, or how incarnation ""opens"" imitation
 
 
 
Where the discipline is wary of theory as of not-knowledge. The illusion of specificity, the illusion of exactitude, and the ""historian's blow""
 
 
 
Where the past screens the past. The indispensable find and the unthinkable loss. Where history and art come to impede the history of art
 
 
 
First platitude: art is over . . . since the existence of the history of art. Metaphysical trap and positivist trap
 
 
 
Second platitude: everything is visible . . . since art is dead
 
 
 
2. Art as Rebirth and the Immortality of the Ideal Man
 
 
 
Where art was invented as renascent from its ashes, and where the history of art invented itself along with it
 
 
 
The four legitimations of Vasari's Lives: obedience to the prince, the social body of art, the appeal to origins, and the appeal to ends
 
 
 
Where Vasari saves artists from oblivion and ""renames/renowns"" them in eterna fama.
 
 
 
The history of art as second religion, devoted to the immortality of ideal men
 
 
 
Metaphysical ends and courtly ends. Where the crack is closed in the ideal and realism: a magic writing-pad operation
 
 
 
The first three magic words: rinascità, imitazione, idea (89). The fourth magic word: disegno. Where art legitimates itself as unified object, noble practice, and intellectual knowledge. The metaphysics of Federico Zuccari. Where the history of art creates art in its own image
 
 
 
3. The History of Art Within the Limits of Its Simple Reason
 
 
 
The ends that Vasari bequeathed to us. Simple reason, or how discourse invents its object
 
 
 
Metamorphoses of the Vasarian thesis, emergences from the moment of antithesis: the Kantian tone adopted by the history of art
 
 
 
Where Erwin Panofsky develops the moment of antithesis and critique. How the visible takes on meaning. Interpretive violence
 
 
 
From antithesis to synthesis. Kantian ends, metaphysical ends. Synthesis as magical operation
 
 
 
First magic word: humanism. Where object of knowledge becomes form of knowledge.
 
 
 
Vasari as Kantian and Kant as humanist. Powers of consciousness and return to the ideal man
 
 
 
Second magic word: iconology. Return to Cesare Ripa. Visible, legible, invisible. The notion of iconological content as transcendental synthesis. Panofsky's retreat
 
 
 
Farther, too far: the idealist constraint. Third magic word: symbolic form. Where the sensible sign is absorbed by the intelligible. The pertinence of function, the idealism of ""functional unity""
 
 
 
From image to concept and from concept to image. Fourth magic word: schematism. The final unity of synthesis in representation. The image monogrammed, cut short, made ""pure."" A science of art under constraint to logic and metaphysics
 
 
 
4. The Image as Rend and the Death of God Incarnate
 
 
 
First approximation to renounce the schematism of the history of art: the rend. To open the image, to open logic
 
 
 
Where the dream-work smashes the box of representation. Work is not function. The power of the negative. Where resemblance works, plays, inverts, and dissembles. Where figuring equals disfiguring
 
 
 
Extent and limits of the dream paradigm. Seeing and looking. Where dream and symptom decenter the subject of knowledge
 
 
 
Second approximation to renounce the idealism of the history of art: the symptom.
 
 
 
Panofsky the metapsychologist? On questioning the denial of the symptom. There is no Panofskian unconscious
 
 
 
The Panofskian model of deduction faced with the Freudian paradigm of over-determination. The example of melancholy. Symbol and symptom. Constructed share, cursed share
 
 
 
Third approximation to renounce the iconographism of the history of art and the tyranny of imitation: the Incarnation. Flesh and body. The double economy: mimetic fabric and ""upholstery buttons."" The prototypical images of Christianity and the index of incarnation
 
 
 
For a history of symptomatic intensities. Some examples. Dissemblance and unction. Where figuring equals modifying figures equals disfiguring
 
 
 
Fourth approximation to renounce the humanism of the history of art: death. Resemblance as drama. Two medieval treatises facing Vasari: the rent subject facing the man of humanism. The history of art is a history of imbroglios
 
 
 
Resemblance to life, resemblance to death. The economy of death in Christianity: the ruse and the risk. Where death insists in the image. And us, before the image?
 
 
 
 
 
Appendix: The Detail and the Pan
 
The aporia of the detail
 
To paint or to depict
 
The accident: material radiance
 
The symptom: slippage of meaning
 
Beyond the detail principle
 
 
 
Notes
 
Index
 
 
 

“I cannot think of any more important book in the recent history of art. Confronting Images is just what the English-speaking art-historical community needs to help it out of the impasse of debates around ‘cultural studies’ and ‘visual literacy.’”

—James Elkins, School of the Art Institute of Chicago

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