Vanishing Points
Three Dimensional Perspective in Art and History
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About the Book
This book traces the history of three dimensional perspective in art from prehistoric and ancient times, during which the portrayal of depth was practically nonexistent, through its early development by the Greeks and Romans; its virtual disappearance in the Middle Ages; and its re-emergence and perfection in the Renaissance. The book also examines the role of the right cerebral hemisphere in appreciation of aesthetics and particularly of three dimensional art. It further points to similar human attributes that have risen and declined in tandem with the use of perspective, and which are also mediated by the right hemisphere: expressiveness of the human face, use of metaphor, love of the grand panoramas of nature, and the sense of self. The book considers not only the role of three-dimensional art in the rise of landscape painting, but also its contribution to the admiration and investigation of nature and the rise of the scientific age.
About the Author(s)
Bibliographic Details
Milton E. Brener
Format: softcover (6 x 9)
Pages: 223
Bibliographic Info: photos, notes, bibliography, index
Copyright Date: 2004
pISBN: 978-0-7864-1854-1
Imprint: McFarland
Table of Contents
Preface 1
I. The “Discovery” of the Third Dimension 5
II. Art before the Third Dimension 14
III. The “Right” Brain 31
IV. The Greeks 41
V. Reaching for the Third Dimension 50
VI. Nature in Ancient Art 67
VII. Nature as Religion in Ancient Literature 76
VIII. Discovery of the Individual 89
IX. Novelty 100
X. Portraiture 112
XI. The Romans 121
XII. The Middle Ages and the Retreat of Nature 130
XIII. Metaphor, Individuality and Facial Representation in the Middle Ages 140
XIV. Chinese Landscape 149
XV. One Point in Space, One Moment in Time 156
XVI. Landscape in Western Art 167
XVII. The Battle for Nature 178
XVIII. Evolution? 188
XIX. The Final Vanishing Points 194
Chapter Notes 199
Bibliography 203
Index 211
Book Reviews & Awards
- “An important invitation to art historians…Brener’s ideas will interest students…accessible and intriguing, highly literate…this book manages to raise the big questions the professionals sometimes manage to forget…highly recommended”—Choice
- “Absorbing”—The Mankind Quarterly