C 2022

Crossing Borders and Period Boundaries in Central European Art : The Work of Anna Lesznai (ca. 1910–1930)

SECKLEHNER, Julia

Basic information

Original name

Crossing Borders and Period Boundaries in Central European Art : The Work of Anna Lesznai (ca. 1910–1930)

Authors

SECKLEHNER, Julia

Edition

Oldenbourg, Rethinking Period Boundaries : New Approaches to Continuity and Discontinuity in Modern European History and Culture, p. 119-148, 30 pp. 2022

Publisher

De Gruyter

Other information

Language

English

Type of outcome

Chapter(s) of a specialized book

Country of publisher

Germany

Confidentiality degree

is not subject to a state or trade secret

Publication form

printed version "print"

References:

Marked to be transferred to RIV

No

Organization

Filozofická fakulta – Repository – Repository

ISBN

978-3-11-063206-4

EID Scopus

Keywords in English

Anna Lesznai; vernacular modernism; periodization; boundaries

Links

786314, interní kód Repo.
Changed: 6/4/2023 04:59, RNDr. Daniel Jakubík

Abstract

In the original language

The normativisation of art history has a long tradition. From what is widely considered the discipline’s foundational text, Giorgio Vasari’s Lives of the Artists (1550), the history of art has long viewed its subject matter as a lineage in which different stages of development follow each other in a logical succession, according to principles of progress and formal innovation. Key to the establishment of the discipline, this way of periodizing forges categories which, besides referring to particular places in time and space (e.g. Vasari’s ‘Italian Renaissance’), help foreground what makes a given stage of development ‘innovative’ or ‘progressive’ and, thus, worthy of the scholar’s attention. While providing one of the most essential structuring devices for the history of art as a discipline and connecting its internal developments to broader events in social and political history, this system of periodization nonetheless comes with notable flaws. Even though Vasari’s account was recognised as the standard text for studies of the Italian Renaissance for centuries, it was predicated on a clear political-artistic bias: because of the support he received from the Florence-based Medici family, Vasari favoured Florentine painters, most notably Michelangelo, to their non-Florentine counterparts. As is well known, this had far-reaching consequences: while Florence gained a reputation as the cradle of the Renaissance, its rival city Siena was long relegated to secondary status and its artistic production presented as ‘lagging behind’ that of Florence.

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