离去的灵魂。中世纪造物的长寿

IF 0.1 3区 艺术学 0 ART
M. Barasch
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引用次数: 8

摘要

这篇文章论述了灵魂离去的肖像学。虽然埃及和希腊艺术知道灵魂的主题,但中世纪文化创造了灵魂在离开垂死之人身体的特定时刻的形象。作者调查了中世纪关于这一主题的例子。灵魂总是被认为是匿名的,这可能与中世纪的一些思想趋势有关,比如一念论。在中世纪晚期和近代早期,灵魂离去的主题得到了发展。不仅圣母的灵魂,或特别受人尊敬的圣人的灵魂被想象为离开肉体,而且每个凡人的灵魂,包括有罪的人。另一个新特点是对灵魂命运的兴趣和关注。灵魂的离去与灵魂审判的母题纠缠在一起。后来,在16世纪和17世纪,意大利艺术家并没有创造出一个统一的主题形象。然而,某些特征在所有的表现中反复出现——一个是灵魂的匿名性,另一个是灵魂的年轻性。中世纪晚期的图像将灵魂和身体并列,在风格主义和早期巴洛克时代制作的图像将灵魂从它以前的住所——身体中分离出来,并展示了它通往最终目的地——天堂的道路。作者展示了中世纪的创作是多么长寿。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
The Departing Soul. The Long Life of a Medieval Creation
The essay deals with the iconography of departing soul. Although Egyptian and Greek art knew the motif of a soul, it was medieval culture which created iconography of a figure of the soul at the particular moment of leaving the body of a dying person. The author investigates medieval examples of this topic. Souls were always represented as anonymous, which may be explained in connection with some intellectual trends of the Middle Ages like Monopsychism. In the late Middle Ages and early modern age the motif of the departing soul was developed. Not only was the soul of the Virgin, or of a particularly venerated saint imagined as departing from the body but also the soul of every mortal human being, including the sinful. The other new feature is the focusing of interest and attention on the fate of the soul. The departure of the soul is fussed with the motif of the judgment of the soul. Later, in the 16th and 17th centuries, Italian artists didn't create a unified image of the motif. Nevertheless, certain features recur in all representations — one is the anonymity of soul, another is its youthfulness. The late medieval images juxtaposed soul and body, the images made in the age of Mannerism and early Baroque detach the soul form its former dwelling place, the body, and show it on its way to the final destination, the heavens. The author shows how long-lived the medieval creation was.
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来源期刊
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期刊介绍: Artibus et Historiae is a journal dedicated to the visual arts, published by IRSA Publishing House. The lavishly illustrated articles cover a broad range of subjects, including photography and film, as well as traditional topics of scholarly art research. Artibus et Historiae particularly encourages interdisciplinary studies - art history in conjunction with other humanistic fields, such as psychology, sociology, philosophy, or literature - and unconventional approaches. Thus it is hoped that the current trends in art history will be well represented in our issues. Artibus et Historiae appears twice a year, in hardback. The articles are in one of four languages: English, Italian, German, or French, at the author"s discretion.
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