COML787 - Tpcs in Contemporary Art: Photo-Painting

Status
O
Activity
SEM
Section number integer
401
Title (text only)
Tpcs in Contemporary Art: Photo-Painting
Term
2019C
Subject area
COML
Section number only
401
Section ID
COML787401
Course number integer
787
Meeting times
M 02:00 PM-05:00 PM
Level
graduate
Instructors
Kaja Silverman
Description
Topics vary each semester. Fall 2019: "When industry erupts in the sphere of art," Baudelaire famously wrote in 1859, "it becomes the latter's mortal enemy, and in the resulting confusion of functions none is well carried out...If photography is allowed to deputize for art in some of art's activities, it will not be long before it has supplanted or corrupted art altogether...Photography must, therefore, return to its true duty, which is handmaid of the arts and sciences." History has not been kind to this argument. First, Henry Fox Talbot and many of his contemporaries attributed the photographic image to nature, not industry, and the same is true of a number of contemporary artists. Second, by 1842--three years after the official invention of photography--photographers had already begun hand-coloring their daguerreotypes, and a century and a half later Richter started smearing and spattering paint onto small photographs, and exhibiting them along with his abstract and figurative paintings. By the mid-1850's, many artists were also painting from photographs, sometimes by projecting them onto their canvases, and treating these projections as preparatory drawings. They called the resulting images photo-paintings. And although it became increasingly "disreputable" to work in this way as the century progressed,
Course number only
787
Cross listings
ARTH794401, ENGL793401
Use local description
No