Hiding in Plain Sight: A Profile of Artistic Purpose in Velazquez’s Las Meninas Or: The Artist as Creator King

Thomas E. Boudreau
{"title":"Hiding in Plain Sight: A Profile of Artistic Purpose in Velazquez’s Las Meninas Or: The Artist as Creator King","authors":"Thomas E. Boudreau","doi":"10.15640/ijaah.v7n2p1","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"Though Diego Velazquez‘s masterpiece Las Meninas is one of the most celebrated paintings in the modern world, its full meaning is still considered somewhat of a mystery. In view of this, the authors of this essay, two experienced law enforcement profilers, employ criminal profiling analysis and techniques to examine the actual evidence in plain sight within the painting as a whole. Much commentary has been written about the skills of the artist, and various eras and styles of art or the proportions in the painting; yet, this is not simply a painting about the artist and his manifold subjects portrayed in a specific era; the evidence within the painting points us in a rather new and unique direction, providing us with a ―plausible rival hypothesis‖ about the artistic purpose in the painting. In essence, Velazquez is creating and paying deep homage to the new royal court and power of artistic creation; in turn, he is honoring the almost divine-like powers of new royalty, the artist as Creator–King. As such, we as spectators are also participants and the critical subjects and audience, in this new ROYAL COURT OF ART, as portrayed in this extraordinary painting by the Artist King, Diego Velazquez. Methodologies: Criminal Profiling, Link Analysis, Multiplex Methodology Critical Words: Velazquez, Las Meninas, Picasso, Spanish Art, Full Ground, Integral Inquiry Authors’ Preface: Profilers As Artists. The authors of this essay are consultants or profilers of varied experience for law enforcement agencies as well as being amateur artists. In view of this, they have both shared a fascination with self-portraits of artists, especially those consisting of a painting of the artist in his or her own studio—as in Vermeer‘s The Art of Painting.2 In the enclosed essay, the authors have developed a summary profile-study of Diego Velazquez‘s Las Meninas which hangs in the Museo del Prado located in almost the center of in Madrid, Spain, the homeland that gave it such an auspicious birth.3 Uniqueness is often overlooked by scholars, eager to situate singular events or even creations in a theoretical and thus generalized context, but never by law enforcement investigators. As such, the painting Las Meninas is the primary scene to be investigated, not of an illustrious example of Baroque period art, but first and foremost, as a unique creation. As such, our perspective is that of investigators searching for or looking at the evidence in plain sight, not simply as witnesses or appreciative spectators. Furthermore, the evidence in a superior realist painting (or crime scene) is often profoundly interrelated and interdependent; yet, such subtle interplay is often lost on spectators who cannot get beyond their own prejudices, stereotypes or shibboleths to see theradical uniqueness of life or art. 1 Interdisciplinary Professor, Salisbury University; Andrei Ibid is a semi-retired Law Enforcement Profiler and amateur artist. 2 We will not engage in the ongoing debate of whether this is, in fact Vermeer in the painting except to note that, with the tangled yet apparent Black and White Masks on the table, separated by the head of an apparent serpent, pondered by the Muse of History, there may be much meaning uninvestigated in this painting as well. 3Masterpieces of the Prado. Thames & Hudson; 1 edition (September 13, 2016); Also see: O.C. Paredes, Prado Gallery, a New Guide. Editorial Mayfe, S.S. Madrid, 1976; Bernardino de Pantorrba, A Guide Book of the Prado Museum, Editorial Gran Capitan, Madrid, 1950. 2 International Journal of Art and Art History, Vol. 7, No. 2, December 2019 This is why such uncorroborated accounts of a witness or various witness narrations and accounts are notoriously unreliable in reconstructing the events that a witness supposedly viewed firsthand. For this reason, we call the resulting perceptions of such immediate and uncorroborated narratives by individuals ―Rorschach Realities‖ since the witnesses or profilers themselves, often see what they only want to see, or believe to perceive. 4 So, in the following profile of Las Meninas, the authors relied on the painting itself as the primary evidence of the artist’s purpose or intent. Because of this, our academic references or citations from texts on the subject, though sometimes perused are kept to a minimum, in the following summary and preliminary profile;5 This is true with the exception of reviewing Picasso‘ nearly fifty renditions of the same painting, many of which are whimsical and pure joy, yet retain key insights gleamed by a fellow great Spanish painter;6 we examined some of these masterful renditions carefully as well. As a useful though tentative starting point, we have borrowed from Michal Foucault‘s book The Order ofThings which proved useful in our preliminary study and subsequent investigation.7 In particular, we share with Foucault a healthy skepticism, especially at first, of academic discourses within the domain disciplines, especially concerning the history of art; for instance, the authors regard critical commentary or artistic ̳labels‖—such as ―Naturalism‖ or ―Baroque art‖ –as primary explanations or even as ―witnesses‖ and, as such, offer only preliminary, non-definitive and even poor substitutes for thinking and appreciating anew in the exhaustive inquiry required to decipher a painter‘s often complex purpose or intent in choosing the time, place, setting and subjects of his creative composition. This is especially true, we believe, when the artist chooses his own studio for his or her self-portrait; the artist‘s studio is often a profoundly personal place and space; yet, the artist studio is not simply a space where creative activity occurs; an artist‘s studio is a source of personal inspiration and insight and becomes an essential part of the creative process itself, as Rodin‘s personal studio which was full of models, busts, half-finished arms and legs attests.8 The artist studio is also a personal statement since he or she can choose what is there, and what to omit. In his or her private studio, the artist is fully in control to construct a ―full-ground‖ creation that is can provide special insight into his or her artistic processes and purpose;9 this is especially true of a genius and master in his trade, Velazquez, who certainly has a unique vision to share in his Masterpiece (or one of them), Las Meninas.10 By ―full ground,‖ we mean taking into account, and making fully explicit, the complex configuration of interrelationships that constitute a specific phenomenon.11 4 We name this phenomenon of varied ―eye witness‖ accounts of the same events as Rorschach realities in honor of Dr. Hermann Rorschach, a Swiss psychiatrist who was also an amateur artist but tragically died very young. Even so, he developed the famous Rorschach tests that are still used in criminal investigations today, especially of shallow art critics and other fraudsters. The table in the Vermeer painting cited supra, nte 1 is an example of such ―realities.‖ We try to escape from this danger here, but we are inevitably embedded cultural beings as well, so you must be the judge of our success in the following very tentative profile. 5 The historic debate concerning Las Meninas is prodigious, often contentious, and at times trivial. For serious though contested commentary, see, for example: Steinberg, L. (1981). Velázquez'\" Las Meninas\". October, 45-54.;Searle, J. R. (1980). \"Las Meninas\" and the Paradoxes of Pictorial Representation. Critical inquiry, 6(3), 477-488. Snyder, J., & Cohen, T. (1980). Reflexions on\" Las Meninas\": Paradox Lost. Critical Inquiry, 7(2), 429-447; Alpers, S. L. (1983). Interpretation Without Representation: Or, the Viewing of Las Meninas. University of California Press 6 See: Sabartés, Jaume (1959). Picasso, Las Meninas y la vida. Barcelona: Editorial Gustavo Gili; Rafart i Planas, Claustre (2001). Picasso's Las Meninas. Barcelona: Meteora; Calvo Serraller, Francisco; Giménez, Carmen (2006). Picasso, tradición y vanguardia. 38. Madrid: Museo Nacional del Prado / Museo Nacional Centro de Arte Reina Sofía 7Foucault, M. (2005). The Order of Things. Also see: Greslé, Y. (2006). Foucault's Las Meninas and art‐ historical methods. Journal of Literary Studies, 22(3-4), 211-228.. 8 See Grappe, G. (1927). Catalogue du Musée Rodin. Hôtel Biron. Musée Rodin.; or, more recently, Crouch, C. (1982). In Rodin's Studio: A Photographic Record of Sculpture in the Making by Albert E. Elsen and Walter A. Haas. Leonardo, 15(2), 168-168. 9Almost alone among her peers, Susan Alpers recognizes the central importance of the Artist‘s personal studio, and devotes the first chapter of her book Vexations, to this critical topic. See: Alpers, S. (2007). The vexations of art: Velázquez and others. Yale University Press. Yet, she focuses on Velasquez‘s painting the Spinners in this text. 10 It didn‘t hurt that Velasquez was often tasked with buying art for the King which then found its way into his studio! 11Boudreau, T. (1998). Universitas: the social restructuring of American undergraduate education. Greenwood Publishing Group. Also see: BLINDSPOTS: AN EPISTEMIC EXPLORATION INTO INTEGRAL INQUIRY, LINK ANALYSIS AND THE CONCEPTUAL CAUSES OF CLIMATE CHANGE. (Unpublished manuscript) See infra, note 12 .","PeriodicalId":149648,"journal":{"name":"INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF ART AND ART HISTORY","volume":"124 1","pages":"0"},"PeriodicalIF":0.0000,"publicationDate":"1900-01-01","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"1","resultStr":null,"platform":"Semanticscholar","paperid":null,"PeriodicalName":"INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF ART AND ART HISTORY","FirstCategoryId":"1085","ListUrlMain":"https://doi.org/10.15640/ijaah.v7n2p1","RegionNum":0,"RegionCategory":null,"ArticlePicture":[],"TitleCN":null,"AbstractTextCN":null,"PMCID":null,"EPubDate":"","PubModel":"","JCR":"","JCRName":"","Score":null,"Total":0}
引用次数: 1

Abstract

Though Diego Velazquez‘s masterpiece Las Meninas is one of the most celebrated paintings in the modern world, its full meaning is still considered somewhat of a mystery. In view of this, the authors of this essay, two experienced law enforcement profilers, employ criminal profiling analysis and techniques to examine the actual evidence in plain sight within the painting as a whole. Much commentary has been written about the skills of the artist, and various eras and styles of art or the proportions in the painting; yet, this is not simply a painting about the artist and his manifold subjects portrayed in a specific era; the evidence within the painting points us in a rather new and unique direction, providing us with a ―plausible rival hypothesis‖ about the artistic purpose in the painting. In essence, Velazquez is creating and paying deep homage to the new royal court and power of artistic creation; in turn, he is honoring the almost divine-like powers of new royalty, the artist as Creator–King. As such, we as spectators are also participants and the critical subjects and audience, in this new ROYAL COURT OF ART, as portrayed in this extraordinary painting by the Artist King, Diego Velazquez. Methodologies: Criminal Profiling, Link Analysis, Multiplex Methodology Critical Words: Velazquez, Las Meninas, Picasso, Spanish Art, Full Ground, Integral Inquiry Authors’ Preface: Profilers As Artists. The authors of this essay are consultants or profilers of varied experience for law enforcement agencies as well as being amateur artists. In view of this, they have both shared a fascination with self-portraits of artists, especially those consisting of a painting of the artist in his or her own studio—as in Vermeer‘s The Art of Painting.2 In the enclosed essay, the authors have developed a summary profile-study of Diego Velazquez‘s Las Meninas which hangs in the Museo del Prado located in almost the center of in Madrid, Spain, the homeland that gave it such an auspicious birth.3 Uniqueness is often overlooked by scholars, eager to situate singular events or even creations in a theoretical and thus generalized context, but never by law enforcement investigators. As such, the painting Las Meninas is the primary scene to be investigated, not of an illustrious example of Baroque period art, but first and foremost, as a unique creation. As such, our perspective is that of investigators searching for or looking at the evidence in plain sight, not simply as witnesses or appreciative spectators. Furthermore, the evidence in a superior realist painting (or crime scene) is often profoundly interrelated and interdependent; yet, such subtle interplay is often lost on spectators who cannot get beyond their own prejudices, stereotypes or shibboleths to see theradical uniqueness of life or art. 1 Interdisciplinary Professor, Salisbury University; Andrei Ibid is a semi-retired Law Enforcement Profiler and amateur artist. 2 We will not engage in the ongoing debate of whether this is, in fact Vermeer in the painting except to note that, with the tangled yet apparent Black and White Masks on the table, separated by the head of an apparent serpent, pondered by the Muse of History, there may be much meaning uninvestigated in this painting as well. 3Masterpieces of the Prado. Thames & Hudson; 1 edition (September 13, 2016); Also see: O.C. Paredes, Prado Gallery, a New Guide. Editorial Mayfe, S.S. Madrid, 1976; Bernardino de Pantorrba, A Guide Book of the Prado Museum, Editorial Gran Capitan, Madrid, 1950. 2 International Journal of Art and Art History, Vol. 7, No. 2, December 2019 This is why such uncorroborated accounts of a witness or various witness narrations and accounts are notoriously unreliable in reconstructing the events that a witness supposedly viewed firsthand. For this reason, we call the resulting perceptions of such immediate and uncorroborated narratives by individuals ―Rorschach Realities‖ since the witnesses or profilers themselves, often see what they only want to see, or believe to perceive. 4 So, in the following profile of Las Meninas, the authors relied on the painting itself as the primary evidence of the artist’s purpose or intent. Because of this, our academic references or citations from texts on the subject, though sometimes perused are kept to a minimum, in the following summary and preliminary profile;5 This is true with the exception of reviewing Picasso‘ nearly fifty renditions of the same painting, many of which are whimsical and pure joy, yet retain key insights gleamed by a fellow great Spanish painter;6 we examined some of these masterful renditions carefully as well. As a useful though tentative starting point, we have borrowed from Michal Foucault‘s book The Order ofThings which proved useful in our preliminary study and subsequent investigation.7 In particular, we share with Foucault a healthy skepticism, especially at first, of academic discourses within the domain disciplines, especially concerning the history of art; for instance, the authors regard critical commentary or artistic ̳labels‖—such as ―Naturalism‖ or ―Baroque art‖ –as primary explanations or even as ―witnesses‖ and, as such, offer only preliminary, non-definitive and even poor substitutes for thinking and appreciating anew in the exhaustive inquiry required to decipher a painter‘s often complex purpose or intent in choosing the time, place, setting and subjects of his creative composition. This is especially true, we believe, when the artist chooses his own studio for his or her self-portrait; the artist‘s studio is often a profoundly personal place and space; yet, the artist studio is not simply a space where creative activity occurs; an artist‘s studio is a source of personal inspiration and insight and becomes an essential part of the creative process itself, as Rodin‘s personal studio which was full of models, busts, half-finished arms and legs attests.8 The artist studio is also a personal statement since he or she can choose what is there, and what to omit. In his or her private studio, the artist is fully in control to construct a ―full-ground‖ creation that is can provide special insight into his or her artistic processes and purpose;9 this is especially true of a genius and master in his trade, Velazquez, who certainly has a unique vision to share in his Masterpiece (or one of them), Las Meninas.10 By ―full ground,‖ we mean taking into account, and making fully explicit, the complex configuration of interrelationships that constitute a specific phenomenon.11 4 We name this phenomenon of varied ―eye witness‖ accounts of the same events as Rorschach realities in honor of Dr. Hermann Rorschach, a Swiss psychiatrist who was also an amateur artist but tragically died very young. Even so, he developed the famous Rorschach tests that are still used in criminal investigations today, especially of shallow art critics and other fraudsters. The table in the Vermeer painting cited supra, nte 1 is an example of such ―realities.‖ We try to escape from this danger here, but we are inevitably embedded cultural beings as well, so you must be the judge of our success in the following very tentative profile. 5 The historic debate concerning Las Meninas is prodigious, often contentious, and at times trivial. For serious though contested commentary, see, for example: Steinberg, L. (1981). Velázquez'" Las Meninas". October, 45-54.;Searle, J. R. (1980). "Las Meninas" and the Paradoxes of Pictorial Representation. Critical inquiry, 6(3), 477-488. Snyder, J., & Cohen, T. (1980). Reflexions on" Las Meninas": Paradox Lost. Critical Inquiry, 7(2), 429-447; Alpers, S. L. (1983). Interpretation Without Representation: Or, the Viewing of Las Meninas. University of California Press 6 See: Sabartés, Jaume (1959). Picasso, Las Meninas y la vida. Barcelona: Editorial Gustavo Gili; Rafart i Planas, Claustre (2001). Picasso's Las Meninas. Barcelona: Meteora; Calvo Serraller, Francisco; Giménez, Carmen (2006). Picasso, tradición y vanguardia. 38. Madrid: Museo Nacional del Prado / Museo Nacional Centro de Arte Reina Sofía 7Foucault, M. (2005). The Order of Things. Also see: Greslé, Y. (2006). Foucault's Las Meninas and art‐ historical methods. Journal of Literary Studies, 22(3-4), 211-228.. 8 See Grappe, G. (1927). Catalogue du Musée Rodin. Hôtel Biron. Musée Rodin.; or, more recently, Crouch, C. (1982). In Rodin's Studio: A Photographic Record of Sculpture in the Making by Albert E. Elsen and Walter A. Haas. Leonardo, 15(2), 168-168. 9Almost alone among her peers, Susan Alpers recognizes the central importance of the Artist‘s personal studio, and devotes the first chapter of her book Vexations, to this critical topic. See: Alpers, S. (2007). The vexations of art: Velázquez and others. Yale University Press. Yet, she focuses on Velasquez‘s painting the Spinners in this text. 10 It didn‘t hurt that Velasquez was often tasked with buying art for the King which then found its way into his studio! 11Boudreau, T. (1998). Universitas: the social restructuring of American undergraduate education. Greenwood Publishing Group. Also see: BLINDSPOTS: AN EPISTEMIC EXPLORATION INTO INTEGRAL INQUIRY, LINK ANALYSIS AND THE CONCEPTUAL CAUSES OF CLIMATE CHANGE. (Unpublished manuscript) See infra, note 12 .
隐藏在平淡的视线:委拉斯开兹的《宫女》的艺术目的的侧面或:艺术家作为创造者的国王
特别是,我们与福柯分享了一种健康的怀疑主义,尤其是在一开始,对领域学科内的学术话语,特别是关于艺术史;例如,作者认为批判性评论或艺术的“标签”—如—自然主义‖或—巴洛克艺术‖—作为主要的解释,甚至作为—见证‖,因此,在详尽的调查中,为了解读画家在选择时间、地点、背景和创作主题时往往复杂的目的或意图,只能提供初步的、不确定的、甚至是糟糕的替代思考和欣赏。我们相信,当艺术家选择自己的工作室来创作自画像时,这一点尤其正确;艺术家的工作室通常是一个非常私人的地方和空间;然而,艺术家工作室不仅仅是一个进行创作活动的空间;一个艺术家的工作室是个人灵感和洞察力的源泉,并成为创作过程本身的重要组成部分,正如罗丹的个人工作室,充满了模型,半身像,半成品的手臂和腿证明艺术家的工作室也是一种个人陈述,因为他或她可以选择什么是存在的,什么是省略的。在他或她的私人工作室里,艺术家完全可以控制建造一个“全地面”的创作,这可以提供对他或她的艺术过程和目的的特殊见解;9对于他的行业中的天才和大师委拉斯开兹来说尤其如此,他当然有一个独特的愿景来分享他的杰作(或其中之一),《宫女图》。构成特定现象的相互关系的复杂结构。我们把这种对同一事件的“不同目击证人”的描述称为罗夏现实,以纪念瑞士精神病学家赫尔曼·罗夏博士,他也是一位业余艺术家,但不幸地很年轻就去世了。即便如此,他还是发明了著名的罗夏墨迹测验,至今仍被用于刑事调查,尤其是肤浅的艺术评论家和其他骗子。上面引用的维米尔(Vermeer)画作中的桌子就是这种现实的一个例子。‖我们试图在这里逃避这种危险,但我们不可避免地也是嵌入文化的人,所以你必须在以下非常试探性的简介中判断我们的成功。关于《宫娥图》的历史争论是巨大的,经常是有争议的,有时是微不足道的。关于严肃但有争议的评论,请看斯坦伯格,L.(1981)。Velázquez“宫女图”。Searle, J. R.(1980)。“宫女”与绘画表现的悖论。批判性探究,6(3),477-488。Snyder, J., & Cohen, T.(1980)。对《宫女》的反思:悖论的迷失。批判性探究,7(2),429-447;Alpers, s.l.(1983)。没有表现的诠释:或者,《宫女图》的观看。加州大学出版社6见:sabartsamus, Jaume(1959)。毕加索,《女人与生活》巴塞罗那:编辑古斯塔沃·吉利;Rafart i Planas, clauste(2001)。毕加索的《宫女》。巴塞罗那:迈泰奥拉;弗朗西斯科卡尔沃·塞拉勒;卡门·吉米内斯(2006)。毕加索,tradición y vanguardia。38. 7福柯,M.(2005).马德里:普拉多国家博物馆/雷纳国家艺术中心博物馆Sofía。事物的秩序。也可参见:gresl<e:1>, Y.(2006)。福柯的《宫女》与艺术史方法。文学研究,22(3-4),211-228。8参见Grappe, G.(1927)。罗丹目录。酒店拜伦。罗丹博物馆。最近,克劳奇,C.(1982)。在罗丹的工作室:阿尔伯特·e·埃尔森和沃尔特·A·哈斯的雕塑摄影记录。达芬奇,15(2),168-168。在她的同龄人中,几乎只有苏珊·阿尔珀斯认识到艺术家个人工作室的核心重要性,并在她的书《烦恼》的第一章中专门讨论了这个关键话题。参见:Alpers, S.(2007)。艺术的烦恼:Velázquez和其他。耶鲁大学出版社。然而,在这篇文章中,她关注的是委拉斯开兹的画作《纺纱者》。委拉斯开兹经常受命为国王购买艺术品,然后这些艺术品就进入了他的工作室。11布德罗,T.(1998)。大学:美国本科教育的社会重构。格林伍德出版集团。参见:盲点:对整体调查、关联分析和气候变化的概念原因的认知探索。(未发表的原稿)见下文,注12。
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