21: Inquiries into Art, History, and the Visual (Sep 2023)
Auf den Leib gerückt
Abstract
This essay addresses the question of ethics and aesthetics of distance from a particular angle: the very instable fiction that is the human body. Wavering, it tries to trace how and what kind of distances collapse when the human body in all its resistance as an artistic and academic ‘object’ is approached. How does this interfere with scientific objectivity or the figure of historical distance? The paper touches upon (Christian) concepts of the human body and their entanglement with philosophical and, in its wake, art historical writing with a special focus on early modern European art. It grasps the subject via a medial experience with Eve from the Ghent Altarpiece by Hubert and Jan van Eyck, thereby aiming to explore relations between new media, painting techniques, or style as a means of operating distance effects. By examining relations of closeness and distance through media, technique, style, and the (art historical) discourses on bodies, the essay ventures into a self-critical destabilization of European concepts and formations of bodies.
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