Reading Pictures: the Impossible Dream?

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Author(s)
Woodrow, Ross
Griffith University Author(s)
Year published
2009
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In this paper I will chart the seismic shift that has occurred over the past three decades in attitudes towards the interpretation of visual images. My strategy implies the argument that the reading, and by implication refereeing, of visual images would appear to be an inevitability given the accelerating change of attitudes towards pictures as containers of determinate knowledge. French critical theorists (Foucault, Barthes, Derrida et. al.) dominated debate on interpretation of text and image in the 1980s where my survey begins. Michel Foucault dismissed the image (in Madness and Civilization 1959/1988) as a fascinating ...
View more >In this paper I will chart the seismic shift that has occurred over the past three decades in attitudes towards the interpretation of visual images. My strategy implies the argument that the reading, and by implication refereeing, of visual images would appear to be an inevitability given the accelerating change of attitudes towards pictures as containers of determinate knowledge. French critical theorists (Foucault, Barthes, Derrida et. al.) dominated debate on interpretation of text and image in the 1980s where my survey begins. Michel Foucault dismissed the image (in Madness and Civilization 1959/1988) as a fascinating site for the madness of dreams but one standing outside of reasoned interpretation because of an inherent excess of meaning and deeply hidden attributes and allusions. Generally, however, when images were discussed using identifiable interpretive strategies in the 1980s the framework was a variant of semiotic analysis. (Marin, Eco and Barthes - who famously, diverges from this mode in Camera Lucida). I use W. J. T. Mitchell's text Iconology: Image, Text Ideology 1986 as a focal text from the 1980s and follow this with two of his publications on images, one form 1995 and another from 2005 to demonstrate the dramatic shift in the approach to pictures across almost three decades. Around these focal texts by Mitchell I reference other texts and trends that culminate in the more recent proliferation of texts related to visual studies and the reemergence of aesthetics.
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View more >In this paper I will chart the seismic shift that has occurred over the past three decades in attitudes towards the interpretation of visual images. My strategy implies the argument that the reading, and by implication refereeing, of visual images would appear to be an inevitability given the accelerating change of attitudes towards pictures as containers of determinate knowledge. French critical theorists (Foucault, Barthes, Derrida et. al.) dominated debate on interpretation of text and image in the 1980s where my survey begins. Michel Foucault dismissed the image (in Madness and Civilization 1959/1988) as a fascinating site for the madness of dreams but one standing outside of reasoned interpretation because of an inherent excess of meaning and deeply hidden attributes and allusions. Generally, however, when images were discussed using identifiable interpretive strategies in the 1980s the framework was a variant of semiotic analysis. (Marin, Eco and Barthes - who famously, diverges from this mode in Camera Lucida). I use W. J. T. Mitchell's text Iconology: Image, Text Ideology 1986 as a focal text from the 1980s and follow this with two of his publications on images, one form 1995 and another from 2005 to demonstrate the dramatic shift in the approach to pictures across almost three decades. Around these focal texts by Mitchell I reference other texts and trends that culminate in the more recent proliferation of texts related to visual studies and the reemergence of aesthetics.
View less >
Conference Title
ACUADS 2009 Conference: Interventions in the Public Domain
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Copyright Statement
© The Author(s) 2009. The attached file is posted here with permission of the copyright owner for your personal use only. No further distribution permitted. For information about this conference please refer to the publisher's website or contact the author.
Subject
Art Theory