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El conocimiento secreto

por David Hockney

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6071138,766 (4.03)3
En este libro se analizan lastécnicas perdidas de los grandes maestros de la pintura y el arte.
  1. 00
    Norman Rockwell: Behind the Camera por Ron Schick (jcbrunner)
    jcbrunner: Before photography, the camera obscura was the painter's little helper.
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Inglés (9)  Danés (1)  Noruego (1)  Todos los idiomas (11)
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Indeholder "Introduction", "The visual evidence", "The textual evidence", "The correspondence", "Bibliography", "List of illustrations", "Acknowledgments", "Index".

??? ( )
  bnielsen | Jul 15, 2019 |
Hockney reverse engineers the story of why the style of European painting diverged so fast and to such an extent starting from about 1420 onward. What he comes up with is a credible explanation: painters made use of optical tools (concave mirrors and lenses) to make projections to help them see and get their job done. He rebuilds this story by finding visual evidence in the “document” of the painting itself.

Hockney’s account is wonderful because it takes you from the inception of his idea through the many stages of work he did to gather evidence for his hypothesis. Very quickly, it becomes clear that optics did influence art earlier than once thought and one starts to get a sense of what an “optical” image really looks like in comparison to the “non-optical”. This visual training in the book allows one to really understand what Cezanne and Picasso were responding to when they did their work. They, too, knew that most imagery was informed by optics and, by counterexample, helped remind us that there are many more ways to represent what we see.

Hockney does not make a judgment about the artists who used optics or even optics in itself. His slogan is, “optics do not make marks”, meaning that artists still had a trained hand. Obviously there are good uses for optics and Hockney himself appears to have been dazzled by the optics he experimented with on his journey. However, Hockney is criticizing those that would rather hold up artists as savants than to interpret them as practical inventors. In fact, the prior view does double damage: it both locks us out of art (and the world, according to Hockney) and allows the art establishment to be “nobility”.

Hockney feels that the optical image keeps us in a fixed position with no movement. If this is all we know, how do we see ourselves in the world -- also fixed in position? What’s worse is that most of us think that the optical style is “real”. So if we think being fixed is real, then how can we see ourselves as part of that world where movement is necessary? I see some of the spirit of James Clerk Maxwell in that argument insofar as Maxwell wanted science to be about the process more than he wanted it to be about the products. Although we all enjoy the products of science and art, it is the process that is most important and should be available to us all instead of only the fixed products.

Of course, as the title suggests, the crux of this explanation is that these artists kept their usage of optics secret. There is no explicit written record of artists using these techniques, however the painting is the historical document and all but proves the techniques were used. It is also not unreasonable to think that images were highly sensitive materials in those days (since they are still powerful today). The use of optics and the independent creation of images would have been punishable and would require secrecy. Aside from external motivation for secrecy, there's the selfish motivation to maintain an artist's competitive advantage (in other words, money and prestige were at stake).

Hockney is highly visually literate, and, by reading this book, we all have a chance to see what he saw and pick up on his nuanced visual sense. Hockney’s most artful accomplishment in this book is that he successfully makes something so prevalent and ingrained as the optical image (TV, computer screens, print) seem so foreign to life. Hockney is a true artist for helping us realize this. ( )
  danrk | Jul 29, 2018 |
This is what you'll learn when you study the Old Bastards ! ( )
  Baku-X | Jan 10, 2017 |
Fascinating read. I happened to see this book in the library, and borrowed it because I had watched a documentary on the same topic.

The premise is that the old masters, such as Vermeer and others, used photographic/optical techniques and tools - such as the camera obscura or camera lucida.

Recommended for anyone interested in art history.
Unfortunately, I don't think it'll turn me magically into an artist ... ah well.
  GeetuM | Jun 3, 2016 |
This is what you'll learn when you study the Old Bastards ! ( )
  BakuDreamer | Sep 7, 2013 |
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En este libro se analizan lastécnicas perdidas de los grandes maestros de la pintura y el arte.

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