0315 On the Presence and Absence of Images

A French Nineteenth-Century Painting in the Lantern Slide Collection of the Freer Gallery of Art

  • Lavinia Amenduni (Author)
    https://orcid.org/0009-0009-1028-6894

    Lavinia Amenduni studied Philosophy and Art History in Perugia and Bologna before starting her doctoral degree at Ludwig-Maximilians-Universität in Munich, where she focuses on formal comparisons between Western and Far Eastern art in art historiography. She is currently a fellow at the Zentralinstitut für Kunstgeschichte in Munich.

Identifiers (Article)

Abstract

Starting from the presence of a painting by Aimé Morot among the slide collection of Charles Lang Freer, a collection otherwise devoted to modern American painters and Asian art, the essay traces back the origin of this slide to the collection of Ernest Fenollosa and untangles the documentation on how his slides found their home in the Freer Archives in Washington, D.C. Fenollosa’s use of this slide to juxtapose ancient Japanese art and modern French painting is a starting point for reflecting on the role that the presence – or absence – of images played in printed texts as opposed to lectures, and how that in turn fueled the tendency towards stylistic comparisons. Lastly, the position of lantern slides as a tool that was once indispensable to art history, and now, in the digital era, becomes a historical and material object to be studied as such, allows us to reflect on one of the many epistemological shifts that we face as art historians.

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Language
en
Keywords
Fenollosa, Ernest, Freer, Charles Lang, Morot, Aimé, lantern slide, comparativism