Start by looking closely—but then let’s talk about scale, composition, space, form, line, color, tone, and more.
Close looking and approaches to art
Introduction: Close looking and approaches to art
Learning to look closely
Let’s look at Joaquín Torres-García’s América Invertida (Inverted America)—how would you describe its form, composition, line, color, texture, light, and treatment of space? How would you analyze the choices he made? What meaning do they have?
If you are struggling to answer these questions, take heart! The skill of describing what you see and analyzing an artwork’s form—what is often called a visual or formal analysis—can be challenging. It requires time and practice to do it well, and also involves learning new terms. You read a brief introduction to it in part 1 of the introduction, but this section introduces you to this process in more detail. Formal analysis is an important skill to develop as you learn about the histories of art, and it gets you to look closely at an artwork. To analyze an artwork’s form, you first have to engage in close looking, finding words to describe what you see—imagine you have to describe to a friend over the phone what you are seeing so that they could identify the artwork if they were to one day encounter it. Once you can describe something in detail, you are then better equipped to consider why or how the artist’s choices are meaningful (so not just what is represented, but why it is represented that way).
Torres-García positions an outline of Uruguay almost directly in the center of his map, with a line crossing through it, a + marking it, a ship angled toward it, and even numbers (coordinates) and a sun clustered near it—all of these are helping to draw our eye to the center of the map. The way that Torres-García composed his map visually reinforces his conceptual idea to position South America, and here Uruguay in particular, as the focal point of the map.
Spending time doing deep looking might surprise you, and initially might even seem odd or pointless, but as you look you will notice things that you might not otherwise in quick passing. Did you know that the average museum goer spends less than 10 seconds looking at an object? Try to look at a single object for 15 minutes, perhaps sketching it or taking notes about what you observe.
Like any approach, visual analysis has its limitations, but is useful when combined with other methods to analyze and talk about art, and it is a starting point for most art historians. To learn how to do a visual analysis—of both painting and sculpture—watch the two videos here.
Scale, composition, space, form, line, color, tone, balance, symmetry—your head is likely swimming with a lot of new terms. Learning the language of formal description and analysis takes time, and the more you can practice the easier it will become. In the following short essays, you will learn in more detail about some of these important elements of art and principles of composition.
Short essays about the elements of art and the principles of composition
Line: the most basic visual element.
Color: Artists can use colors for many reasons, including setting moods and highlighting importance.
Shape and form: building on line and color.
Balancing the elements in a work of art: symmetry, asymmetry, radial symmetry, and emphasis.
Movement: a sense of motion as the eye is guided through a work.
Proportion: the relationship of parts of a body or form to one another and of the parts to the whole.
Pattern or repetition: an image or object is repeated in a work of art.
Learning to identify the subject matter: iconography
Analyzing the formal qualities of an artwork is only one approach to understanding it. Another method used to analyze art is called the iconographic approach, which attempts to identify and understand the subject matter, symbols, and motifs in an artwork. With this approach, formal qualities are not entirely overlooked but they are not the main conveyors of meaning. Let’s turn briefly to an example:
Are you able to identify these figures and scene? If you can, how are you able to identify them? What motifs or symbols appear in the painting that help you to make sense of what you are seeing? Or perhaps you cannot identify anything—this might be because you are not enmeshed in a specific culture and do not understand the specific cultural references. To learn more about the steps art historians take to identify and interpret the subject matter of an artwork you will read an introduction to iconographic analysis.
(<span class=”tooltips” title=”Whole page left, and detail, right, Sultan Muhammad, The Court of Gayumars, 47 x 32 cm, opaque watercolor, ink, gold, silver on paper, folio 20v, Shahnameh of Shah Tahmasp I (Safavid), Tabriz, Iran ((Aga Khan Museum, Toronto).”>Hover over this text to reveal what the subject of the image above is).
An essay about iconography
How do art historians determine the meanings of symbols and identify subject matter? Learn more with this brief introduction to the iconographic approach.
Now that you’ve learned more about the iconographic method, do you think we can use it to help us understand Marcel Duchamp’s Fountain?
What about a masi (tapa cloth) from Fiji?
Can we use formal (visual) analysis or the iconographic approach to analyze performance art, such as Marina Abramovic’s The Artist is Present, in which she sat silently at a table and locked eyes with people as they took turns sitting in another chair staring back at her? As you learn more about art history from this book and your classes, you will feel more empowered to answer these questions!
More than meets the eye
Besides analyzing the form of an artwork or its subject matter, there are other aspects of an artwork’s makeup or production that we can begin to think about. Here are some other questions to consider as you examine art and architecture:
- Who paid for it and why?
- How did something function after it was created, and has that function changed over time?
- How is it informed by what was happening politically, religiously, or economically at the time?
- Where was it displayed?
- Was it part of a larger work originally?
- What materials is it made of, and where do they come from?
- Is a building, object, or monument still in its original location, and if not, why was it moved?
Attempting to answer these types of questions can tell us about gender and power dynamics, networks of interactions, religious beliefs, new technologies, ecological concerns, and so much more!
Thinking about primary sources
Imagine that you are standing in front of Juan Martínez Montañés and Francisco Pacheco’s polychromed wooden sculpture of Christ of Clemency in the Cathedral of Seville, Spain. You might be struck by the intense naturalism of Christ’s body carved in wood by Martínez Montañés and painted by Pacheco.
Now that you know more about how to visually analyze and use the iconographic method, you could use those approaches to understand this sculpture better. But what if you also had a document that told you what the patron (the person who commissioned the sculpture) wanted the sculpture to look like and why? Would this add another layer to our understanding? It turns out that we do have such a document, and it tell us what the patron stipulated the sculpture’s appearance:
The Lord Christ crucified must be [portrayed] alive, before having expired, with his head inclined to the right side, looking toward whatever person might be praying at his feet, as though Christ himself were speaking to him or her, and as though complaining that what he is suffering is for the sake of the one praying. And so the eyes and face of Christ should have a certain severity, and the eyes should be completely open.
Primary textual sources, or original documents that were produced during the time period you are studying such as this one about the Christ of Clemency, are another important source of information for art historians. They can help art historians determine the reasons for a patron’s commission, why an artwork looks the way it does, how an artwork relates to broader trends and ideas of a time period, and much more. Not all cultures throughout time created written textual sources though—for any number of reasons—so the use of primary source texts is not always possible. The following essay about empress Theodora addresses another issue that is important to consider when using primary sources: how do we determine whether a source is reliable and accurate?
An essay about primary sources
Is the source reliable? Empress Theodora, rhetoric, and Byzantine primary sources
Common questions about dates and how to read a caption
To end this introductory chapter, let’s briefly consider how we mark time using dates and what information we can glean from captions.
Dates
Cultures across the world throughout time have used different systems to mark time, so it is important to have a basic familiarity with what we mean when we say something was made in AD 1270, 1270 C.E., or even c. 1270 C.E.
We might even mark time using several different systems at once, such as when we note that Fan Kuan’s Travelers by Streams and Mountains was made c. 1000 C.E. in the Song dynasty (which lasted 960–1279 C.E.). Likewise, you might also see different methods of marking time. The Islamic Hijri calendar marks time differently. 2021 C.E. in the western Gregorian calendar is actually Safar 1443 on the Hijri calendar because Muslims mark the beginning of the calendar with what corresponds to the year 622 C.E. It is an important reminder that religions or cultures may think about and mark time differently.
An essay about dates
Where to begin with dates? Depending on the calendar, it all starts with something different.
Captions
Now that you’ve made it to the end of this chapter you’ve encountered a number of image captions, so let’s take a look at what all that information means, and how it can help you to study and research art.
Take a look at the image and its caption:
Here is what this all means:
- Artist: Leonardo da Vinci—this tells us who made the work of art
- Title: Last Supper—this is what people call the work of art
- Date: 1498—when the work of art was made.
- Medium (materials): tempera and oil on plaster—what the work of art is made of
- Location: Santa Maria della Grazie, Milan—the current location of a work of art, which sometimes is a museum
- Photo credit: public domain. You might see other types of licenses here, such as Creative Commons licenses (CC). This lets you know what license the photographer has put on their photograph and how you can use it.