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What Domenichino knew

A long march through five centuries of art history
by
April 2021, no. 430

A History of Art History by Christopher S. Wood

Princeton University Press, $59.99 hb, 459 pp

What Domenichino knew

A long march through five centuries of art history
by
April 2021, no. 430

The history of art history in the West over the past five hundred years is rich and complex and yet rests on clear historiographical foundations, themselves grounded in inescapable historical realities. Authors and artists in the Renaissance looked back to the civilisation of Greco-Roman antiquity, all but lost in the catastrophe of the fall of the Roman Empire and succeeded by centuries of dramatic cultural regression. They sought to regain the greatness of antiquity, and the bolder even hoped to surpass it.

This is the basis of Vasari’s three-stage account of the rise of Renaissance art (1550), the first beginning with Giotto, the second with Masaccio, and the third with Leonardo. Vasari considered the greatest of his contemporaries, Michelangelo, to have equalled the ancients, but a later generation came to believe that the sixteenth-century Mannerists had lost their way. From the early seventeenth century, therefore, the model was extended to include an interval of decline before the new impetus beginning with the Carracci, and this process continued in academic debates about line, colour, and what we now call the Baroque.

Christopher Allen reviews 'A History of Art History' by Christopher S. Wood

A History of Art History

by Christopher S. Wood

Princeton University Press, $59.99 hb, 459 pp