Contemporary criminology is witnessing something of a 'visual turn' and as researchers develop their methods of enquiry it is clear that interdisciplinary scholarship will play a key role in shaping inventive approaches in it. In this article, I discuss some of the different ways art historians have 'read' images and the multiple connections they have forged to understand an artwork, before turning to how these approaches have been mobilized in a single example: Titian's Flaying of Marsyas, which dates from the 1570s, and is among the most disturbing images in the entire history of art
Art history, as practiced in the United States, is a highly self-reflective discipline that privileg...
First published online: 10 December 2020In the English edition of his monograph published in 2013 (M...
The trajectory and heuristic success of Art History as a discipline has always been inseparably link...
Over ten years ago now Peter Burke, an early-modern European historian, wrote that ‘historians still...
Between Art History and Visual Studies : Myth, Science, and Ideology Art history is deeply rooted i...
This article analyses the processes involved in description and ‘close looking’ in relation to works...
This paper addresses the extent to which the ‘narrative turn’ in criminology can help inform how ima...
How do people make sense of works of art? And how do they write to make others see the same way? The...
Constcamer paintings or pictures of collections were created almost exclusively in Antwerp, and to a...
The article presents various approaches to the methodology of modern and contemporary art history. ...
In the twenty-first century, a mode of visual art making has emerged that utilises methodological pr...
If pictures can paint a thousand words, why do many dismiss them quickly? Our human ancestors, Homo ...
Written from the point of view of a historian of religion\s, the article asks why the so-called “vis...
While much discussion of art practice within research and university contexts tends to draw from 'pr...
Methodology can be understood as the art of building references that last. As an art it is concerned...
Art history, as practiced in the United States, is a highly self-reflective discipline that privileg...
First published online: 10 December 2020In the English edition of his monograph published in 2013 (M...
The trajectory and heuristic success of Art History as a discipline has always been inseparably link...
Over ten years ago now Peter Burke, an early-modern European historian, wrote that ‘historians still...
Between Art History and Visual Studies : Myth, Science, and Ideology Art history is deeply rooted i...
This article analyses the processes involved in description and ‘close looking’ in relation to works...
This paper addresses the extent to which the ‘narrative turn’ in criminology can help inform how ima...
How do people make sense of works of art? And how do they write to make others see the same way? The...
Constcamer paintings or pictures of collections were created almost exclusively in Antwerp, and to a...
The article presents various approaches to the methodology of modern and contemporary art history. ...
In the twenty-first century, a mode of visual art making has emerged that utilises methodological pr...
If pictures can paint a thousand words, why do many dismiss them quickly? Our human ancestors, Homo ...
Written from the point of view of a historian of religion\s, the article asks why the so-called “vis...
While much discussion of art practice within research and university contexts tends to draw from 'pr...
Methodology can be understood as the art of building references that last. As an art it is concerned...
Art history, as practiced in the United States, is a highly self-reflective discipline that privileg...
First published online: 10 December 2020In the English edition of his monograph published in 2013 (M...
The trajectory and heuristic success of Art History as a discipline has always been inseparably link...