Iconographies of death

G. Plaitano
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Abstract

Since the sixteenth century, artistic anatomy – a branch of medical science subordinated to the Fine Arts – has understood itself as a comparative investigation halfway between forensic dissection and the analysis of classical art and live bodies. Its teaching was first instituted in Italy by the 1802 curriculum of the national Fine Arts academies, but underwent a drastic transformation at the turn of the century, as the rise of photography brought about both a new aesthetics of vision and an increase in the precision of iconographic documentation. In this article I will attempt to provide a history of the teaching of this discipline at the close of the nineteenth century within the Accademia di Belle Arti di Brera in Milan, with a focus on its ties to contemporary French practices. Drawing on archival materials including lesson plans, letters and notes from the classes of the three medical doctors who subsequently held the chair (Gaetano Strambio, Alessandro Lanzillotti-Buonsanti and Carlo Biaggi), I will argue that the deep connections between their teaching of the discipline and their work at the city hospital reveal a hybrid approach, with the modern drive towards live-body study unable to wholly supplant the central role still granted to corpses in the grammar of the visual arts.
死亡的肖像
自16世纪以来,艺术解剖学——从属于美术的医学分支——已经把自己理解为一种介于法医解剖和古典艺术和活体分析之间的比较研究。它的教学最初是由1802年意大利国家美术学院的课程设立的,但在世纪之交经历了一次剧烈的转变,因为摄影的兴起带来了新的视觉美学和图像记录精度的提高。在这篇文章中,我将尝试提供这一学科的教学历史,在十九世纪末在米兰的Belle Arti di Brera学院,重点是它与当代法国实践的联系。根据档案材料,包括后来担任主席的三位医生(Gaetano Strambio, Alessandro Lanzillotti-Buonsanti和Carlo Biaggi)的课程计划、信件和笔记,我将认为,他们的学科教学与他们在城市医院的工作之间的深刻联系揭示了一种混合方法。随着现代对活体研究的推动,无法完全取代尸体在视觉艺术语法中仍然被赋予的中心地位。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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