Iconology

From Sustainability Methods
Method categorization for Iconology


Method categorization
Quantitative Qualitative
Inductive Deductive
Individual System Global
Past Present Future



In short: Iconology is a research method that is traditionally used to detect an overall worldview of a past decade or location by interpreting a painting of that time or area.

Background

From Greek “Icon” = picture, “Logos” = word, thinking, speech, reason (Leben 19, Irsigler 2) Iconology is a research method originating in the field of art history and was founded by the German art historian Erwin Panofsky in cooperation with Aby Warburg in the 1930s (Morosow 3, Irsigler 1). To this day it is one of the groundworks for all visual analysis done in art, media, theatre, and performance analysis (cf. Leben, Schädler, Schwendler). Contemporarily, it is also used as an analysis method in research fields like architecture, literary studies and even politics (cf. Leben, Schädler, Schwendler). This entry focuses on the basics of the traditional iconology. However, <artwork> and <artist> can also be replaced by any other object and practitioner and can be especially effective in experimental, inter-, and transdisciplinary research.


What the method does

Generally, iconology works as a three-step model through which different questions are formulated and the according insights are put together subsequently in a complex manner (Wirth 21). The three steps are: the pre-iconographic step, the step of interpretation (or iconography) and the iconological synthesis (Wirth 21). Panofsky advised to not consider the steps as absolutely separated, because the verbal articulation of the artwork can only really be usefully read in its complete meaning after the analysis and interpretation (7). Step 1 - Pre-iconography: The pre-iconographic step involves the analysis of all formal aspects of the artwork (1a) and the articulation of the emotional reception of the work (1b) (Wirth 21). Usually, the formal aspects are described upfront (Bambach-Horst 132, Wirth 21). However, sometimes the emotional reception is formulated first and positioned ahead of the rest of the analysis as a “percept” (zu Deutsch: “Perzept”), because it involves the researcher’s subjectivity and is therefore a non-scientific insight which some writers and readers like to separate from the scientific text. Nonetheless, the percept is an important part of the iconological analysis and should not be completely excluded, because it can situate the analysis historically and culturally and lead to fruitful insights for the analysis itself and for foreign or future audiences.

1a) The formal analysis should include naming the artist and the date and place of production as well as the ownership or place of exhibition, identifying the type of artwork (i.e. painting, sculpture, performance etc.), the scale of the artwork, all materials used, genre and epoch, the form of composition, the colour composition (saturation, light and shadow, forms of contrasts, colour schemes) and all depictions which refers to the recognizability of all things depicted, i.e. the scale of abstraction, the structure, and the arrangement/positioning of things portrayed (fore, mid and background, size of things, left or right) (Bambach-Horst 132, Wirth et. al. 21). See below for a list of all aspects of the formal analysis in more detail: • Name of the artwork: note the name of the artwork. • Naming the type of artwork: make sure to note the type of artwork. Is it a sculpture? A painting? Mixed Media? • Name the scale and format of the artwork. • Naming the artist: note the artists full name, date of birth and death. • Name the date and place of production. • List all materials used during the production of the artwork. • Name the genre and epoch of the artwork only if you are absolutely sure it is correct. Especially analyses that were conducted before the cultural and pictorial turn of postmodernism, which included cultures and pictures of everyday life as scientifically significant and actively socio-politically produced (Sardar & van Loon 5-6), should be paid attention to. These analyses often ascribed genres and epochs to artworks solely because of the culture and time they were produced in, ignoring the fact that some paintings are not common but in opposite very unusual for their date and place of production. • Identify the form of composition: this step is quite hard to recognize without training, but there are a few tricks on how you can tell the composition by the contours and placements of the artwork’s contents. These are the traditional compositions: symmetrical and asymmetrical (vertical, horizontal), dynamic linear (diagonally from left upper side to right corner or vice versa, the former is precepted as soothing in European culture, the latter as arousing), square, oval, round, triangular and the golden section. Of course, combinations are possible, but there is in almost all cases one compositional form that dominates the arrangement of objects and colours within an artwork. • Identify the composition of colours: the composition of colours includes the most dominant colours of the painting, including questions like: which colour has been used most dominantly? Which colours are unusually bright? It is best to start with identifying the contrasts within the painting, because it already tells a lot about what colours are used the most and what are more significant than others. The most important contrasts are light and dark contrast, pure and impure/muted colours, and the complementary contrast. Be careful about identifying pure and muted colours, since pure colours can be mixed colours and muted colours are not just mixed colours but those mixed with either black or white. Additionally, sometimes harmonies and colour schemes are helpful to conclude the part about colour, but the presence and absence of contrasts are always necessary to mention. • Identify the depictions, scale of abstraction, size of objects and arrangement: it is important to be careful about interpreting certain objects of depiction as specific objects or beings, especially if the painting or parts of it are abstract. However, if objects are clear to you, it is important to name them. Sometimes it is easier to first note the depictions and then explain the colour composition, but both steps can also be combined, as well as mentioning the scale of abstraction, and the arrangement and size of the objects and the logic of organization, including the gradation of the objects in the fore-, middle-, and background and the probable absence of one of the three. (cf. Bambach-Horst 132) Disclaimer: In general, if something is unknown or unrecognizable, always make sure to state that after referring to what is known and seen about a category.


The steps of interpretation by Erwin Panofsky in "Iconology and Iconography". Source.

Contemporary Iconology

Contemporary iconology, compared to traditional iconology, also includes other fields in which iconology has become an effective method of analysing present and past events. Political iconography for example is capable of analysing artistic and medial staging of governments and ruling classes (Leben 26). Such visual representations can lead to new findings about political history or reverse national ideas about their own history which reveal possible ‘false histories’ by the means of iconology (Leben 26). Spatial iconology or architectural iconology engage with the organization of rooms, their interior structure, its historic symbolical meaning, and how it influenced perception and usage of space by certain groups of society. These forms were an adaption by Günter Bandman of Panofsky’s traditional iconography which focused on paintings (cf. Leben 27, Schädler 162). Also, archaeology is a prominent field in which Panofsky’s iconology is in constant use to determine pottery, paintings, and sculptures (162).

Strengths & Challenges

Panofsky’s iconographic method is a great way to gain an overview about visual materials. The last step is especially fruitful on gaining insights on the side of the production, may it be the environment of production or the producer/artist as such. Iconology is ideal to research a certain worldview expressed through visual materials. However, it is very important to also accept the possibility of a painting to express the opposite of what information the iconographic step has provided. If done with caution and attention, the pre-iconographic step and the iconological synthesis will draw attention to such discordancies. The iconographic turn is an attempt of some postmodern thinkers to redefine the way in which images are understood (cf. Burda 118). Other than Panofsky’s approach, which focused on reading the worldview transmitted by pictures (Topper 449), Brock wanted to add the term “Bilderwelten” (Brock in Burda 118) (‘pictorial worlds’) which means to additionally uncover and interpret any internally ordered unities within a picture (cf. Brock in Burda 118). From then on, Panofsky’s iconological model has been decreasingly developed itself but has since become more specialized by new aspects being added rather than changed (Irsigler 2).

Additionally, there is the issue that iconology often leads to different and even opposing findings than other art research methods of which iconology is always the more traditional approach (Irsigler 1). One prominent attempt to widen Panofsky’s method was Mitchells “aim […] to further generalize the interpretive ambitions of iconology by asking it to consider the idea of the image as such” (Mitchell 2). He thus asked two key questions: "What is an image?" and "What is the difference between images and word?” (1). He continues by defining an image generally as a thing that represents objects in the world with a certain “likeness”, “resemblances”, or “similitude” (10). Topper argues however, that this is still not enough and adds that “maps, diagrams and décor” do not always meet any of Mitchell’s criteria, yet need to be included in the definition of what an image is (cf. Topper 449). Nevertheless, none of the two specify how iconology should adapt to make an interpretative analysis of the more generalized term ‘image’ possible.

Outlook

It is very probable that the rise of inter-, multi-, and transdisciplinary studies and the ongoing postmodern criticism on the sole acceptance of the scientific method of the natural sciences will contribute to the progress of widening and complementing traditional iconology and hence make a greater implementation of the method possible.


Key Publications

• Mitchell, William T.J. „Iconology: Image, Text, Ideology”, University of Chicago Press, 2009 • Müller, Marion G. and Geise, Stephanie. Grundlagen der Visuellen Kommunikation, utb Verlag, 2015. • Panofsky, Erwin. „Ikonographie und Ikonologie - Bildinterpretation nach dem Dreistufenmodell“, DuMont, 2006. • Petersen, Tomas and Schwender, Clemens. Die Entschlüsselung der Bilder. Methoden zur Erforschung visueller Kommunikation. Ein Handbuch, 1st Edition, Herbert von Halem Verlag, 2018.


References

• Bambach-Horst, Eva. „Bildanalyse und Bildinterpretation“, Kunstgeschichte. Von der Antike bis zum 21. Jahrhundert, Dudenverlag, Berlin, 2012. • Burda, Hubert, et al. In medias res. Zehn Kapitel zum Iconic Turn. Fink, Paderborn, 2010. • Irsigler, Franziska. „Möglichkeiten und Grenzen der Ikonologie als kunsthistorische Methode. Panofsky und seine Kritiker“, 2006. • Leben, Luka. „Ikonographie und Ikonologie“, Methoden der Kunstvermittlung, 2017, pp.1-28. • Mitchell, William T.J. „Iconology: Image, Text, Ideology”, University of Chicago Press, 2009 • Morosow, Alexander. “Kunstmittel der Ikonologie“, 2014, pp.1-13. • Sardar, Ziauddin & van Loon, Borin. Introducing Cultural Studies. • Schädler, Ulrich. „Ikonologie und Archäologie“, Walter de Gruyter, 1993, pp.162-187. • Topper, David. Leonardo, vol. 22, no. 3/4, 1989, pp. 449–450. JSTOR, www.jstor.org/stable/1575437. Accessed 14 June 2021. • Wirth et al, Ingo. “Kunst und Bilder richtig verstehen?“, Kompaktwissen Oberstufe, 3. Auflage, Cornelsen Scriptor, Mannheim, 2011.


The Table of Contributors of this entry is Mona Hübner.