ICONOGRAPHY

īˌkŏnŏgˈrəfē [Gr.,=image-drawing] or iconology [Gr.,=image-study], in art history, the study and interpretation of figural representations, either individual or symbolic, religious or secular; more broadly, the art of representation by pictures or images, which may or may not have a symbolic as well as an apparent or superficial meaning.

The Meaning and Significance of Iconography

When first used in the 18th cent. the term was confined to the study of engravings, which were then the standard mode of illustrating books on art and on antiquities in general. But it came shortly to be applied more specifically to the history and classification of Christian images and symbols of all sorts, in whatever medium they happened to be rendered originally or in whatever way they were reproduced for study.

With the rise of the systematic investigation of art from prehistoric ages to modern times, it became apparent that each major phase or epoch in which figural representations occur had created and developed in varying degrees of richness and elaboration an iconography of its own. As used today, therefore, the term is necessarily qualified to indicate the field of iconographic study under discussion—e.g., the iconography of the various Egyptian deities, the iconography of Roman imperial portraits, early Christian iconography, Buddhist or Hindu iconography, Byzantine iconography, Gothic iconography.

As a method of scholarly research the science of iconography strives also to recover and express the thought from which a given convention of representation has arisen, particularly when the convention has assumed the value of a symbol. The importance of identifying motifs is central to iconographical interpretation. For example, St. Catherine of Alexandria is traditionally portrayed in the presence of a wheel. This wheel is a familiar attribute that serves to identify her and that at the same time signifies a miracle connected with her martyrdom. Some attributes are more difficult to understand, and their obscurity has led scholars to consult other images or literary sources in order to interpret the motif more satisfactorily.

Certain themes characteristic of a specific philosophy have been commonly represented during an era, and an iconography has been developed to express them. An example is the still life vanitas vanitatum of the Middle Ages, a reminder of the transitory quality of earthly pleasure symbolized by a skull, candle, and hourglass (or, in later versions, a watch). In every living art the conventions and symbols, as well as their meanings, change with the passage of time and the growth of ideas; many disappear, while others become almost unintelligible to a later generation and can be recovered only by intensive study. Among the foremost scholars in iconographic studies are Didron, Émile Mâle, Aby Warburg, and Erwin Panofsky.

Christian Iconography

By reason of its long history and the dynamic concepts that controlled it, the growth of Christian iconography is rich and varied. Beginning with the catacomb frescoes in the early centuries of the Christian era, it deals with the perils faced by the human soul on earth in its journey toward eternal salvation. Figures from the Old Testament (e.g., Abraham, Judith and Holofernes), episodes from the life and passion of Jesus (e.g., the Nativity, the Descent from the Cross, the Pietà), scenes from the life of the Virgin Mary (e.g., the Sacred Conversation, the Visitation), scenes from the lives of the saints (e.g., St. Francis Receiving the Stigmata, St. Jerome in the Wilderness, the Martyrdom of St. Agatha), and symbolic scenes of ultimate beatitude (e.g., the Majesty, the Savior of the World, the Coronation of the Virgin), all reveal the same purpose—to repeat in many forms and inculcate in every mind the moral aims and fundamental dogmas of the Christian religion.

A long series of evolutionary stages unfolds in the representation of a given person or scene from the art of the catacombs to that of the Gothic cathedrals. Thus the art of the Middle Ages is above all a kind of sacred writing whose system of characters, i.e., the iconography, had to be learned by every artist. It was governed also by a kind of sacred mathematics, in which position, grouping, symmetry, and number were of extraordinary importance and were themselves an integral part of the iconography.

From earliest times Christian iconography has likewise been a symbolic code, showing the faithful one thing and inviting them to see in it the figure of another. Some examples are: the dove, which figures the Holy Spirit; the fish, symbol of Christ, from the Greek icthus, an anagram for Jesus Christ, Son of God, Savior; the monkey or reptile as symbol of evil; and the bowl or pitcher of water and the vase of lilies that signify the Virgin's purity in the Annunciation scene. In Christian art, form is thus the vehicle of spiritual meaning; in the expression and reading of this meaning lies the essence of Christian iconography.

Bibliography

See E. Panofsky, Studies in Iconology (1939, repr. 1962); G. Ferguson, Signs and Symbols in Christian Art (2d ed. 1955); A. N. Didron, Christian Iconography (2 vol., tr. 1851–86, repr. 1965); G. Schiller, Iconography of Christian Art (tr. 1971).

____________________

The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition Copyright© 2004, Columbia University Press. Licensed from Lernout & Hauspie Speech Products N.V. All rights reserved.

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books on: Iconography  - 6995 results

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...books were similar to Douce in size,25 iconography, and utility (even their more elaborate iconography was primarily place-finding and mnemonic...28 and it shares much civil service iconography with manuscripts like the Omne bonum...
...expressed in texts and those expressed in iconography, or between ideas and actual practices...merge in the practice of commissioning iconography and then dedicating the merit ( pu ya...inscriptions donors had carved along with the iconography, and from which Schopen argues that...
...or not this world existed in actuality. Iconography proper, as it was developed in art history...domain of what is normally referred to as iconography. to I will use the term iconography throughout this text in Panofskys sense...
...most important celestial host in plague iconography. According to the Golden Legend, St...and 88. 105. For Charles Borromeos iconography see Carlo Bascape, De vita et rebus...body was found near Palermo and her iconography developed, largely by Anthony van Dyck...
...in the United States. 9 Though the iconography of nation, race, and gender here is...Paradoxically, the significance of such iconography may thus reside in what it does not...in charged and familiar ways, this iconography performs no resolution. It appears...
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journal articles on: Iconography  - 3277 results

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The Iconography of Hindu Tantric Deities, Vol. 1...Mantramahodadhi. by Paul E. Muller-Ortega The Iconography of Hindu Tantric Deities, vol. 1...2000. Pp. xxix + 280. euro80. The Iconography of Hindu Tantric Deities, vol. 2...
Images of Plague and Pestilence: Iconography and Iconology. . by Eunice D. Howe...Images of Plague and Pestilence: Iconography and Iconology. (Sixteenth-Century...overview of various sources of plague iconography," to investigate the iconography of...
The Iconography of Cylinder Seals. The Iconography of Cylinder Seals. Edited by PAUL TAYLOR. Warburg Institute...learned that the Institutes entire section on Western Asian iconography includes only four thousand photos (p. 2, n. 7...
...Dance in Ancient Java. A Study in Dance Iconography by Astri Wright Alessandra Iyer. Bangkok...doctoral research on the history, iconography, and practice of dance in Java into...discussing the dance reliefs and their dance iconography in greater detail, giving a more detailed...
Route 66: Iconography of the American Highway. by Kevin Patrick ROUTE 66: Iconography of the American Highway. By ARTHUR KRIM...according to Arthur Krims new book, Route 66: Iconography of the American Highway, roots that go back...
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Mission San Xavier del Bac: A Guide to Its Iconography. by Michael K. Komanecky Mission San Xavier del Bac: A Guide to Its Iconography by Yvonne Lange with Richard E. Alhorn, photographs by Helga Teiwes. University of Arizona Press, 166...
An Iconography of Contagion: When a Fly Wipes His...recruited for such campaigns devised a new iconography of contagion that emphasized visual...do-it-yourself" aesthetic. "An Iconography of Contagion: An Exhibition of 20th...
...face: Tarnya Cooper looks at the wider iconography of Elizabeth, and how this evolved...charity and wisdom. Yet, the complex iconography of these large-scale portraits was...examples borrow heavily on classical iconography. Another image probably produced for...
Sub-study Group on Dance Iconography by Barbara Sparti Four out of five of the editors of Imaging Dance, the projected book that grew out of the Iconography sub-study groups work over the past five years, met in Hawaii during the first week...
...the Jacobite Defeat at Culloden, Has Come to Dominate the Iconography of That Event. by Jacqueline Riding ILLUSTRATION OMITTED...painting is one of the most enduring expressions of its subjects iconography. In many ways the apotheosis. Ultimately the work owes...
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Iconography Faithfully Follows a Tradition; Church...Manassas, will demonstrate antique iconography methods using egg tempera paint and...MissSiegel said. In contrast, modern iconography can be extremely simple and almost abstract...
...Gobsmacked": Agent Steve Lazarides "Ironic Iconography": The Outsiders Exhibition (Left...features artwork satirising American iconography, predominantly by British artists...Standard: "Its really meant to be ironic iconography. These people are in the newspapers...
...Gobsmacked": Agent Steve Lazarides "Ironic Iconography": The Outsiders Exhibition (Left...features artwork satirising American iconography, predominantly by British artists...Standard: "Its really meant to be ironic iconography. These people are in the newspapers...
Letter: We Need Less Iconography, More Modesty. Byline: PAUL DAVIS Dear Editor, Iconic buildings...achievement in that regard. Whats needed on the NatWest site is less iconography, more modesty, I think. The temptation is great to use new...
...Orthodox Church Hosts Exhibit of Religious Works, Choirs, Iconography Classes. Byline: Jordan Buie, THE WASHINGTON TIMES Margot...various faiths and cultures who come to experience the world of iconography and to learn more about our Eastern Orthodox tradition...
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encyclopedia articles on: Iconography  - 27 results

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ICONOGRAPHY i konog r fe Gr.,=image-drawing...meaning. The Meaning and Significance of Iconography When first used in the 18th cent. the...degrees of richness and elaboration an iconography of its own. As used today, therefore...
CHRISTIAN ICONOGRAPHY see under iconography . ____________________ Copyright 2009 Columbia University Press. Used with the permission of Columbia University Press. All rights reserved.
...dedicated Russia to her. Artistic representations of Mary are innumerable; for differing aspects, see Christian iconography under iconography . She has been the subject of countless works from the time of the pseudepigrapha. Bibliography See H. C...
...relatively soon after the death of Jesus. Most date from the 4th to the 6th cent. a.d. See also Christian iconography under iconography . Earliest Works Little is known about Christian art in the first two centuries after the death of Jesus...
...Reliefs of the yakshis carved against railing pillars are more frankly sensual and erotic than those at Sanchi. Buddhist iconography was developed in Gandhara. Mathura, however, preserved and developed Indian forms for three centuries. The Gupta Period...
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