Making Space for Painting

Like the frame, the spaces of painting are constructions that factor into the (re)production of the limits of the pictorial world. How these spaces are viewed – when they are acknowledged as there at all – is largely overlooked in favor of a focus on the subject or “meaning” of the artwork, as if th...

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Main Author: Paul Duro
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Centre de Recherche "Texte et Critique de Texte" 2023-11-01
Series:Sillages Critiques
Subjects:
Online Access:https://journals.openedition.org/sillagescritiques/14804
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author Paul Duro
author_facet Paul Duro
author_sort Paul Duro
collection DOAJ
description Like the frame, the spaces of painting are constructions that factor into the (re)production of the limits of the pictorial world. How these spaces are viewed – when they are acknowledged as there at all – is largely overlooked in favor of a focus on the subject or “meaning” of the artwork, as if the key to understanding the image is to be found in the title – the starting point for the average gallery visitor’s apprehension of the artwork. This is perfectly legitimate, but it tends to distract the viewer from those parts of the work that are often considered less important, such as the background, as well as failing to account for the abstraction prevalent in the many modern artworks that avoid a title altogether. But space is never simply there; it is constructed like any other part of painting (line, color, composition etc.), and serves to situate the beholder within the domain of representation, positioning us in relation not only to the visual field (which is essentially the work of the frame), but also identifies these spaces according to the kinds of subject represented. The resulting field therefore opens up a world that functions, at its limit, symbolically, mediating between the beholder on the one hand and the needs of the artwork on the other. Presenting artwork drawn from cave painting to modernist abstraction, my examples seek to illustrate the various ways in which the framing of space may be said to be the foundational element of picture making – without which the limits of art could not be ascertained.
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publishDate 2023-11-01
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spelling doaj-art-e2ea1b83fe694eefa03944f4c348ff942025-01-30T13:47:49ZengCentre de Recherche "Texte et Critique de Texte"Sillages Critiques1272-38191969-63022023-11-013510.4000/sillagescritiques.14804Making Space for PaintingPaul DuroLike the frame, the spaces of painting are constructions that factor into the (re)production of the limits of the pictorial world. How these spaces are viewed – when they are acknowledged as there at all – is largely overlooked in favor of a focus on the subject or “meaning” of the artwork, as if the key to understanding the image is to be found in the title – the starting point for the average gallery visitor’s apprehension of the artwork. This is perfectly legitimate, but it tends to distract the viewer from those parts of the work that are often considered less important, such as the background, as well as failing to account for the abstraction prevalent in the many modern artworks that avoid a title altogether. But space is never simply there; it is constructed like any other part of painting (line, color, composition etc.), and serves to situate the beholder within the domain of representation, positioning us in relation not only to the visual field (which is essentially the work of the frame), but also identifies these spaces according to the kinds of subject represented. The resulting field therefore opens up a world that functions, at its limit, symbolically, mediating between the beholder on the one hand and the needs of the artwork on the other. Presenting artwork drawn from cave painting to modernist abstraction, my examples seek to illustrate the various ways in which the framing of space may be said to be the foundational element of picture making – without which the limits of art could not be ascertained.https://journals.openedition.org/sillagescritiques/14804perspectivespaceframebeholdercompositionsymbolic form
spellingShingle Paul Duro
Making Space for Painting
Sillages Critiques
perspective
space
frame
beholder
composition
symbolic form
title Making Space for Painting
title_full Making Space for Painting
title_fullStr Making Space for Painting
title_full_unstemmed Making Space for Painting
title_short Making Space for Painting
title_sort making space for painting
topic perspective
space
frame
beholder
composition
symbolic form
url https://journals.openedition.org/sillagescritiques/14804
work_keys_str_mv AT paulduro makingspaceforpainting