What is the period/term used describe Giuseppe Arcimboldo's style of painting?European painting of a man standing on a dragon with his sword drawn, who painted it/what century is it from?Is there a painting from before the colonization of the Americas depicting travelers from far away visiting European nobles?Who is the man in the red jacket in this painting?What is an example of nostalgia for the past in a design context in the interwar period?Are there any antisemitic caricatures from France during the interwar period?What is Lorenzo de' Medici holding in this painting?Who is the model in this Edward Burne-Jones painting?Is there a name for the WPA Art Style?Who's the artist behind this popular painting?What is Washington holding in the painting “Scene at the Signing of the Constitution of the United States”?
Do I have to take mana from my deck or hand when tapping this card?
Can creatures abilities target that creature itself?
C++ lambda syntax
"Marked down as someone wanting to sell shares." What does that mean?
Capacitor electron flow
Connection Between Knot Theory and Number Theory
Derivative of an interpolated function
Is divisi notation needed for brass or woodwind in an orchestra?
Output visual diagram of picture
categorizing a variable turns it from insignificant to significant
What is the period/term used describe Giuseppe Arcimboldo's style of painting?
Does capillary rise violate hydrostatic paradox?
Writing in a Christian voice
Is this saw blade faulty?
Why is indicated airspeed rather than ground speed used during the takeoff roll?
Reason why a kingside attack is not justified
A seasonal riddle
Reasons for having MCU pin-states default to pull-up/down out of reset
Trouble reading roman numeral notation with flats
Why didn't Voldemort know what Grindelwald looked like?
In the event of Brexit being postponed beyond the EU elections, will UK voters in EU countries be eligible to participate?
Mac Mini (2018) 10Gb Port Compatibility
Exposing a company lying about themselves in a tightly knit industry (videogames) : Is my career at risk on the long run?
How to test the sharpness of a knife?
What is the period/term used describe Giuseppe Arcimboldo's style of painting?
European painting of a man standing on a dragon with his sword drawn, who painted it/what century is it from?Is there a painting from before the colonization of the Americas depicting travelers from far away visiting European nobles?Who is the man in the red jacket in this painting?What is an example of nostalgia for the past in a design context in the interwar period?Are there any antisemitic caricatures from France during the interwar period?What is Lorenzo de' Medici holding in this painting?Who is the model in this Edward Burne-Jones painting?Is there a name for the WPA Art Style?Who's the artist behind this popular painting?What is Washington holding in the painting “Scene at the Signing of the Constitution of the United States”?
Giuseppe Arcimboldo was best known for creating portrait heads entirely up of objects. Here are some examples:
He is described as a '16th century Mannerist' and the 'Grandfather of Surrealism'. However, I am looking for a more specific term used to describe this type of painting where subjects are composed of other objects upon closer inspection so that I hopefully take a look at other paintings in this style. An analogy would be how cubism was an offshoot of 3-dimensional art form and later became its own art movement.
Thank you:)
art
New contributor
add a comment |
Giuseppe Arcimboldo was best known for creating portrait heads entirely up of objects. Here are some examples:
He is described as a '16th century Mannerist' and the 'Grandfather of Surrealism'. However, I am looking for a more specific term used to describe this type of painting where subjects are composed of other objects upon closer inspection so that I hopefully take a look at other paintings in this style. An analogy would be how cubism was an offshoot of 3-dimensional art form and later became its own art movement.
Thank you:)
art
New contributor
1
If this is about the 'style' & art history, then you already have your answer. If this is more about the phenomenon of perception, then you might want to migrate this to psychology. Please specify, answers are ready for either site, as there might be quite an overlap.
– LangLangC
9 hours ago
2
FWIW: I'm a bit of a fan of surrealistic art, and had never seen or heard of this before. Thank you so much for asking a question about it!
– T.E.D.♦
9 hours ago
add a comment |
Giuseppe Arcimboldo was best known for creating portrait heads entirely up of objects. Here are some examples:
He is described as a '16th century Mannerist' and the 'Grandfather of Surrealism'. However, I am looking for a more specific term used to describe this type of painting where subjects are composed of other objects upon closer inspection so that I hopefully take a look at other paintings in this style. An analogy would be how cubism was an offshoot of 3-dimensional art form and later became its own art movement.
Thank you:)
art
New contributor
Giuseppe Arcimboldo was best known for creating portrait heads entirely up of objects. Here are some examples:
He is described as a '16th century Mannerist' and the 'Grandfather of Surrealism'. However, I am looking for a more specific term used to describe this type of painting where subjects are composed of other objects upon closer inspection so that I hopefully take a look at other paintings in this style. An analogy would be how cubism was an offshoot of 3-dimensional art form and later became its own art movement.
Thank you:)
art
art
New contributor
New contributor
New contributor
asked 9 hours ago
ComeHitherComeHither
211
211
New contributor
New contributor
1
If this is about the 'style' & art history, then you already have your answer. If this is more about the phenomenon of perception, then you might want to migrate this to psychology. Please specify, answers are ready for either site, as there might be quite an overlap.
– LangLangC
9 hours ago
2
FWIW: I'm a bit of a fan of surrealistic art, and had never seen or heard of this before. Thank you so much for asking a question about it!
– T.E.D.♦
9 hours ago
add a comment |
1
If this is about the 'style' & art history, then you already have your answer. If this is more about the phenomenon of perception, then you might want to migrate this to psychology. Please specify, answers are ready for either site, as there might be quite an overlap.
– LangLangC
9 hours ago
2
FWIW: I'm a bit of a fan of surrealistic art, and had never seen or heard of this before. Thank you so much for asking a question about it!
– T.E.D.♦
9 hours ago
1
1
If this is about the 'style' & art history, then you already have your answer. If this is more about the phenomenon of perception, then you might want to migrate this to psychology. Please specify, answers are ready for either site, as there might be quite an overlap.
– LangLangC
9 hours ago
If this is about the 'style' & art history, then you already have your answer. If this is more about the phenomenon of perception, then you might want to migrate this to psychology. Please specify, answers are ready for either site, as there might be quite an overlap.
– LangLangC
9 hours ago
2
2
FWIW: I'm a bit of a fan of surrealistic art, and had never seen or heard of this before. Thank you so much for asking a question about it!
– T.E.D.♦
9 hours ago
FWIW: I'm a bit of a fan of surrealistic art, and had never seen or heard of this before. Thank you so much for asking a question about it!
– T.E.D.♦
9 hours ago
add a comment |
3 Answers
3
active
oldest
votes
The style of the elements of his paintings are mannerist, an epoch of transition between renaissance and baroque.
However, what we see in his most famous paintings are visual jokes, more or less "hidden faces", in technically often an allegorically glorious mash-up combination of still life and portrait. He tickles our joyous nerves for optical illusions that works especially well for our human pattern recognition circuits calibrated for faces, pareiodolia.
Some more artists that dabbled with this, albeit not in this volume, but sometimes earlier than Acrimboldo were Leonardo da Vinci,
Albrecht Dürer, Tobias Stimmer, Hans Holbein the Younger,
Matthäus Merian, Anna Maria Sibylla Merian, Marcus Gheeraerts the Elder, Wenzel Hollar, Josse de Momper.
As an example from Hollar (although Athanasisus Kirchner is very similar?):
Example from Gheeraerts (alternative image)
Acrimboldo's influence extends to defining ambiguous images, reverse images, and much later vexierbilder and surrealist paintings and op-art.
A list of reversible figures on Wikipedia.
Probably direct inspiration from Arcimboldo might be found in several works of Joris Hoefnagel:
(The reproduction isn't that good: a higher resolution print yields more than the even now obvious allusions; though might have to squint a bit to see different figures emerge)
A nice portrait by Johann Michael Voltz:
Das fürchterliche Raubnest- oder Die Ruine der grossen Kaiserburg der Universalmonarchen –– commonly known as Napoleon
Momper:
Joos de Momper II: "Allegorie des Winters" 17th cent. In: L' homme-paysage, p 63.
Merian:
Matthäus Merian: "Campus Anthropomorphus", In: Athanasius Kircher, Ars magna lucis et umbrae, 1646. In: L' homme-paysage (siehe Literatur), p 16.
Dürer:
Albrecht Dürer, Aquarell bez. „der fenedier clauwsen“, 1495. In: L' homme-paysage, S. 54.
Thomas DaCosta Kaufmann: "Arcimboldo: Visual Jokes, Natural History, and Still-Life Painting", University of Chicago Press: Chicago, London, 2009.
Pictures of Dürer, Momper, Merian in: L' homme-paysage. Visions artistiques du paysage anthropomorphe entre le XVIe et le XXIe siècle. Sous la direction d'Alain Tapié et de Jeanette Zwingenberger [Exposition, 15 octobre 2006 - 14 janvier 2007, Palais des Beaux-Arts de Lille] Paris: Somogy Éd. d'Art, 2006. (src)
add a comment |
In addition to the styles you mentioned, these works of Arcimboldo are "composite portraits" or "composite heads" prefiguring techniques like collage, combination printing, and mashup. Viewers experience pareidolia as the assemblages seem plausible as wholes, though their abstraction is clearly visible. According to María Victoria García-Serrano, Arcimboldo also used the illusion of depth, trompe l'oeil.
I like that term (composite portrait) a lot, but when I tried looking it up, I found that's the name of a completely different photographic technique that was invented in the 19th Century, involving multiple exposures of different views of the same subject on the same photographic plate. Is this term commonly used for Arcimboldo's works too, or just by that one author?
– T.E.D.♦
6 hours ago
1
@T.E.D. The second chapter of my referenced book is called "Arcimboldo from 1562: The creation of composite Heads".
– LangLangC
6 hours ago
1
@T.E.D. I did find a handful pages using that term. Another that's commonly used around Arcimboldo is "composite head", which strikes me as crude.
– Aaron Brick
6 hours ago
1
@AaronBrick - It appears LLC reports seeing that one as well. It at least has the benefit of being unique, and not as confusable with the term for what police sketch artists do. If you see either of the above folks running around on the streets with a gun, I suggest staying out of their way. :-)
– T.E.D.♦
6 hours ago
@T.E.D. Primarily, I'd suggest breathing techniques. For that If anyone sees one of the above "running around on the streets" then their trip-sitter is doing a pretty bad job.
– LangLangC
5 hours ago
add a comment |
I don't think Art Historians have come up with a definitive term for it, because those works of his were fairly unique for his time.
They appear to consider him part of the Mannerist movement based on not just the works you are asking about, but on his other, er... non-flora-based works, and the evolution of that work over time. So its probably reasonable to call Arcimboldo himself a mannerist, while the term remains inadequate as a descriptor for the works of his you are particularly interested in.
If he'd been working in the early 20th Century rather than the 17th, I think it would be perfectly reasonable to call him a Surrealist. But that's a movement with its own history (and sometimes associated philosophy), most of which he predated. So I suppose you could call it surrealistic, but calling it Surrealism or calling Arcimboldo a Surrealist would be an anachronism. Also, as you point out, Surrealism is a very broad category, and you're primarily interested in the one presentation technique he used.
The closest equivalents I can think of for the technique are Pointillism and Divisionalisim. In both cases the artist is making a portrait that looks normal at a distance, but upon closer inspection is made up not of strokes and coherent areas of paint, but of other objects. However, for Pointillists it is usually dots, for Divisionalists dots or small areas (almost like a mosaic), while for Arcimboldo it was representations of seemingly unrelated physical objects. Also of course Pointillism and Divisionalisim developed from Impressionism, and once again Arcimboldo predated that.
add a comment |
Your Answer
StackExchange.ready(function()
var channelOptions =
tags: "".split(" "),
id: "324"
;
initTagRenderer("".split(" "), "".split(" "), channelOptions);
StackExchange.using("externalEditor", function()
// Have to fire editor after snippets, if snippets enabled
if (StackExchange.settings.snippets.snippetsEnabled)
StackExchange.using("snippets", function()
createEditor();
);
else
createEditor();
);
function createEditor()
StackExchange.prepareEditor(
heartbeatType: 'answer',
autoActivateHeartbeat: false,
convertImagesToLinks: false,
noModals: true,
showLowRepImageUploadWarning: true,
reputationToPostImages: null,
bindNavPrevention: true,
postfix: "",
imageUploader:
brandingHtml: "Powered by u003ca class="icon-imgur-white" href="https://imgur.com/"u003eu003c/au003e",
contentPolicyHtml: "User contributions licensed under u003ca href="https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/3.0/"u003ecc by-sa 3.0 with attribution requiredu003c/au003e u003ca href="https://stackoverflow.com/legal/content-policy"u003e(content policy)u003c/au003e",
allowUrls: true
,
noCode: true, onDemand: true,
discardSelector: ".discard-answer"
,immediatelyShowMarkdownHelp:true
);
);
ComeHither is a new contributor. Be nice, and check out our Code of Conduct.
Sign up or log in
StackExchange.ready(function ()
StackExchange.helpers.onClickDraftSave('#login-link');
);
Sign up using Google
Sign up using Facebook
Sign up using Email and Password
Post as a guest
Required, but never shown
StackExchange.ready(
function ()
StackExchange.openid.initPostLogin('.new-post-login', 'https%3a%2f%2fhistory.stackexchange.com%2fquestions%2f51678%2fwhat-is-the-period-term-used-describe-giuseppe-arcimboldos-style-of-painting%23new-answer', 'question_page');
);
Post as a guest
Required, but never shown
3 Answers
3
active
oldest
votes
3 Answers
3
active
oldest
votes
active
oldest
votes
active
oldest
votes
The style of the elements of his paintings are mannerist, an epoch of transition between renaissance and baroque.
However, what we see in his most famous paintings are visual jokes, more or less "hidden faces", in technically often an allegorically glorious mash-up combination of still life and portrait. He tickles our joyous nerves for optical illusions that works especially well for our human pattern recognition circuits calibrated for faces, pareiodolia.
Some more artists that dabbled with this, albeit not in this volume, but sometimes earlier than Acrimboldo were Leonardo da Vinci,
Albrecht Dürer, Tobias Stimmer, Hans Holbein the Younger,
Matthäus Merian, Anna Maria Sibylla Merian, Marcus Gheeraerts the Elder, Wenzel Hollar, Josse de Momper.
As an example from Hollar (although Athanasisus Kirchner is very similar?):
Example from Gheeraerts (alternative image)
Acrimboldo's influence extends to defining ambiguous images, reverse images, and much later vexierbilder and surrealist paintings and op-art.
A list of reversible figures on Wikipedia.
Probably direct inspiration from Arcimboldo might be found in several works of Joris Hoefnagel:
(The reproduction isn't that good: a higher resolution print yields more than the even now obvious allusions; though might have to squint a bit to see different figures emerge)
A nice portrait by Johann Michael Voltz:
Das fürchterliche Raubnest- oder Die Ruine der grossen Kaiserburg der Universalmonarchen –– commonly known as Napoleon
Momper:
Joos de Momper II: "Allegorie des Winters" 17th cent. In: L' homme-paysage, p 63.
Merian:
Matthäus Merian: "Campus Anthropomorphus", In: Athanasius Kircher, Ars magna lucis et umbrae, 1646. In: L' homme-paysage (siehe Literatur), p 16.
Dürer:
Albrecht Dürer, Aquarell bez. „der fenedier clauwsen“, 1495. In: L' homme-paysage, S. 54.
Thomas DaCosta Kaufmann: "Arcimboldo: Visual Jokes, Natural History, and Still-Life Painting", University of Chicago Press: Chicago, London, 2009.
Pictures of Dürer, Momper, Merian in: L' homme-paysage. Visions artistiques du paysage anthropomorphe entre le XVIe et le XXIe siècle. Sous la direction d'Alain Tapié et de Jeanette Zwingenberger [Exposition, 15 octobre 2006 - 14 janvier 2007, Palais des Beaux-Arts de Lille] Paris: Somogy Éd. d'Art, 2006. (src)
add a comment |
The style of the elements of his paintings are mannerist, an epoch of transition between renaissance and baroque.
However, what we see in his most famous paintings are visual jokes, more or less "hidden faces", in technically often an allegorically glorious mash-up combination of still life and portrait. He tickles our joyous nerves for optical illusions that works especially well for our human pattern recognition circuits calibrated for faces, pareiodolia.
Some more artists that dabbled with this, albeit not in this volume, but sometimes earlier than Acrimboldo were Leonardo da Vinci,
Albrecht Dürer, Tobias Stimmer, Hans Holbein the Younger,
Matthäus Merian, Anna Maria Sibylla Merian, Marcus Gheeraerts the Elder, Wenzel Hollar, Josse de Momper.
As an example from Hollar (although Athanasisus Kirchner is very similar?):
Example from Gheeraerts (alternative image)
Acrimboldo's influence extends to defining ambiguous images, reverse images, and much later vexierbilder and surrealist paintings and op-art.
A list of reversible figures on Wikipedia.
Probably direct inspiration from Arcimboldo might be found in several works of Joris Hoefnagel:
(The reproduction isn't that good: a higher resolution print yields more than the even now obvious allusions; though might have to squint a bit to see different figures emerge)
A nice portrait by Johann Michael Voltz:
Das fürchterliche Raubnest- oder Die Ruine der grossen Kaiserburg der Universalmonarchen –– commonly known as Napoleon
Momper:
Joos de Momper II: "Allegorie des Winters" 17th cent. In: L' homme-paysage, p 63.
Merian:
Matthäus Merian: "Campus Anthropomorphus", In: Athanasius Kircher, Ars magna lucis et umbrae, 1646. In: L' homme-paysage (siehe Literatur), p 16.
Dürer:
Albrecht Dürer, Aquarell bez. „der fenedier clauwsen“, 1495. In: L' homme-paysage, S. 54.
Thomas DaCosta Kaufmann: "Arcimboldo: Visual Jokes, Natural History, and Still-Life Painting", University of Chicago Press: Chicago, London, 2009.
Pictures of Dürer, Momper, Merian in: L' homme-paysage. Visions artistiques du paysage anthropomorphe entre le XVIe et le XXIe siècle. Sous la direction d'Alain Tapié et de Jeanette Zwingenberger [Exposition, 15 octobre 2006 - 14 janvier 2007, Palais des Beaux-Arts de Lille] Paris: Somogy Éd. d'Art, 2006. (src)
add a comment |
The style of the elements of his paintings are mannerist, an epoch of transition between renaissance and baroque.
However, what we see in his most famous paintings are visual jokes, more or less "hidden faces", in technically often an allegorically glorious mash-up combination of still life and portrait. He tickles our joyous nerves for optical illusions that works especially well for our human pattern recognition circuits calibrated for faces, pareiodolia.
Some more artists that dabbled with this, albeit not in this volume, but sometimes earlier than Acrimboldo were Leonardo da Vinci,
Albrecht Dürer, Tobias Stimmer, Hans Holbein the Younger,
Matthäus Merian, Anna Maria Sibylla Merian, Marcus Gheeraerts the Elder, Wenzel Hollar, Josse de Momper.
As an example from Hollar (although Athanasisus Kirchner is very similar?):
Example from Gheeraerts (alternative image)
Acrimboldo's influence extends to defining ambiguous images, reverse images, and much later vexierbilder and surrealist paintings and op-art.
A list of reversible figures on Wikipedia.
Probably direct inspiration from Arcimboldo might be found in several works of Joris Hoefnagel:
(The reproduction isn't that good: a higher resolution print yields more than the even now obvious allusions; though might have to squint a bit to see different figures emerge)
A nice portrait by Johann Michael Voltz:
Das fürchterliche Raubnest- oder Die Ruine der grossen Kaiserburg der Universalmonarchen –– commonly known as Napoleon
Momper:
Joos de Momper II: "Allegorie des Winters" 17th cent. In: L' homme-paysage, p 63.
Merian:
Matthäus Merian: "Campus Anthropomorphus", In: Athanasius Kircher, Ars magna lucis et umbrae, 1646. In: L' homme-paysage (siehe Literatur), p 16.
Dürer:
Albrecht Dürer, Aquarell bez. „der fenedier clauwsen“, 1495. In: L' homme-paysage, S. 54.
Thomas DaCosta Kaufmann: "Arcimboldo: Visual Jokes, Natural History, and Still-Life Painting", University of Chicago Press: Chicago, London, 2009.
Pictures of Dürer, Momper, Merian in: L' homme-paysage. Visions artistiques du paysage anthropomorphe entre le XVIe et le XXIe siècle. Sous la direction d'Alain Tapié et de Jeanette Zwingenberger [Exposition, 15 octobre 2006 - 14 janvier 2007, Palais des Beaux-Arts de Lille] Paris: Somogy Éd. d'Art, 2006. (src)
The style of the elements of his paintings are mannerist, an epoch of transition between renaissance and baroque.
However, what we see in his most famous paintings are visual jokes, more or less "hidden faces", in technically often an allegorically glorious mash-up combination of still life and portrait. He tickles our joyous nerves for optical illusions that works especially well for our human pattern recognition circuits calibrated for faces, pareiodolia.
Some more artists that dabbled with this, albeit not in this volume, but sometimes earlier than Acrimboldo were Leonardo da Vinci,
Albrecht Dürer, Tobias Stimmer, Hans Holbein the Younger,
Matthäus Merian, Anna Maria Sibylla Merian, Marcus Gheeraerts the Elder, Wenzel Hollar, Josse de Momper.
As an example from Hollar (although Athanasisus Kirchner is very similar?):
Example from Gheeraerts (alternative image)
Acrimboldo's influence extends to defining ambiguous images, reverse images, and much later vexierbilder and surrealist paintings and op-art.
A list of reversible figures on Wikipedia.
Probably direct inspiration from Arcimboldo might be found in several works of Joris Hoefnagel:
(The reproduction isn't that good: a higher resolution print yields more than the even now obvious allusions; though might have to squint a bit to see different figures emerge)
A nice portrait by Johann Michael Voltz:
Das fürchterliche Raubnest- oder Die Ruine der grossen Kaiserburg der Universalmonarchen –– commonly known as Napoleon
Momper:
Joos de Momper II: "Allegorie des Winters" 17th cent. In: L' homme-paysage, p 63.
Merian:
Matthäus Merian: "Campus Anthropomorphus", In: Athanasius Kircher, Ars magna lucis et umbrae, 1646. In: L' homme-paysage (siehe Literatur), p 16.
Dürer:
Albrecht Dürer, Aquarell bez. „der fenedier clauwsen“, 1495. In: L' homme-paysage, S. 54.
Thomas DaCosta Kaufmann: "Arcimboldo: Visual Jokes, Natural History, and Still-Life Painting", University of Chicago Press: Chicago, London, 2009.
Pictures of Dürer, Momper, Merian in: L' homme-paysage. Visions artistiques du paysage anthropomorphe entre le XVIe et le XXIe siècle. Sous la direction d'Alain Tapié et de Jeanette Zwingenberger [Exposition, 15 octobre 2006 - 14 janvier 2007, Palais des Beaux-Arts de Lille] Paris: Somogy Éd. d'Art, 2006. (src)
edited 14 mins ago
answered 6 hours ago
LangLangCLangLangC
26.2k586133
26.2k586133
add a comment |
add a comment |
In addition to the styles you mentioned, these works of Arcimboldo are "composite portraits" or "composite heads" prefiguring techniques like collage, combination printing, and mashup. Viewers experience pareidolia as the assemblages seem plausible as wholes, though their abstraction is clearly visible. According to María Victoria García-Serrano, Arcimboldo also used the illusion of depth, trompe l'oeil.
I like that term (composite portrait) a lot, but when I tried looking it up, I found that's the name of a completely different photographic technique that was invented in the 19th Century, involving multiple exposures of different views of the same subject on the same photographic plate. Is this term commonly used for Arcimboldo's works too, or just by that one author?
– T.E.D.♦
6 hours ago
1
@T.E.D. The second chapter of my referenced book is called "Arcimboldo from 1562: The creation of composite Heads".
– LangLangC
6 hours ago
1
@T.E.D. I did find a handful pages using that term. Another that's commonly used around Arcimboldo is "composite head", which strikes me as crude.
– Aaron Brick
6 hours ago
1
@AaronBrick - It appears LLC reports seeing that one as well. It at least has the benefit of being unique, and not as confusable with the term for what police sketch artists do. If you see either of the above folks running around on the streets with a gun, I suggest staying out of their way. :-)
– T.E.D.♦
6 hours ago
@T.E.D. Primarily, I'd suggest breathing techniques. For that If anyone sees one of the above "running around on the streets" then their trip-sitter is doing a pretty bad job.
– LangLangC
5 hours ago
add a comment |
In addition to the styles you mentioned, these works of Arcimboldo are "composite portraits" or "composite heads" prefiguring techniques like collage, combination printing, and mashup. Viewers experience pareidolia as the assemblages seem plausible as wholes, though their abstraction is clearly visible. According to María Victoria García-Serrano, Arcimboldo also used the illusion of depth, trompe l'oeil.
I like that term (composite portrait) a lot, but when I tried looking it up, I found that's the name of a completely different photographic technique that was invented in the 19th Century, involving multiple exposures of different views of the same subject on the same photographic plate. Is this term commonly used for Arcimboldo's works too, or just by that one author?
– T.E.D.♦
6 hours ago
1
@T.E.D. The second chapter of my referenced book is called "Arcimboldo from 1562: The creation of composite Heads".
– LangLangC
6 hours ago
1
@T.E.D. I did find a handful pages using that term. Another that's commonly used around Arcimboldo is "composite head", which strikes me as crude.
– Aaron Brick
6 hours ago
1
@AaronBrick - It appears LLC reports seeing that one as well. It at least has the benefit of being unique, and not as confusable with the term for what police sketch artists do. If you see either of the above folks running around on the streets with a gun, I suggest staying out of their way. :-)
– T.E.D.♦
6 hours ago
@T.E.D. Primarily, I'd suggest breathing techniques. For that If anyone sees one of the above "running around on the streets" then their trip-sitter is doing a pretty bad job.
– LangLangC
5 hours ago
add a comment |
In addition to the styles you mentioned, these works of Arcimboldo are "composite portraits" or "composite heads" prefiguring techniques like collage, combination printing, and mashup. Viewers experience pareidolia as the assemblages seem plausible as wholes, though their abstraction is clearly visible. According to María Victoria García-Serrano, Arcimboldo also used the illusion of depth, trompe l'oeil.
In addition to the styles you mentioned, these works of Arcimboldo are "composite portraits" or "composite heads" prefiguring techniques like collage, combination printing, and mashup. Viewers experience pareidolia as the assemblages seem plausible as wholes, though their abstraction is clearly visible. According to María Victoria García-Serrano, Arcimboldo also used the illusion of depth, trompe l'oeil.
edited 6 hours ago
answered 7 hours ago
Aaron BrickAaron Brick
12.5k33386
12.5k33386
I like that term (composite portrait) a lot, but when I tried looking it up, I found that's the name of a completely different photographic technique that was invented in the 19th Century, involving multiple exposures of different views of the same subject on the same photographic plate. Is this term commonly used for Arcimboldo's works too, or just by that one author?
– T.E.D.♦
6 hours ago
1
@T.E.D. The second chapter of my referenced book is called "Arcimboldo from 1562: The creation of composite Heads".
– LangLangC
6 hours ago
1
@T.E.D. I did find a handful pages using that term. Another that's commonly used around Arcimboldo is "composite head", which strikes me as crude.
– Aaron Brick
6 hours ago
1
@AaronBrick - It appears LLC reports seeing that one as well. It at least has the benefit of being unique, and not as confusable with the term for what police sketch artists do. If you see either of the above folks running around on the streets with a gun, I suggest staying out of their way. :-)
– T.E.D.♦
6 hours ago
@T.E.D. Primarily, I'd suggest breathing techniques. For that If anyone sees one of the above "running around on the streets" then their trip-sitter is doing a pretty bad job.
– LangLangC
5 hours ago
add a comment |
I like that term (composite portrait) a lot, but when I tried looking it up, I found that's the name of a completely different photographic technique that was invented in the 19th Century, involving multiple exposures of different views of the same subject on the same photographic plate. Is this term commonly used for Arcimboldo's works too, or just by that one author?
– T.E.D.♦
6 hours ago
1
@T.E.D. The second chapter of my referenced book is called "Arcimboldo from 1562: The creation of composite Heads".
– LangLangC
6 hours ago
1
@T.E.D. I did find a handful pages using that term. Another that's commonly used around Arcimboldo is "composite head", which strikes me as crude.
– Aaron Brick
6 hours ago
1
@AaronBrick - It appears LLC reports seeing that one as well. It at least has the benefit of being unique, and not as confusable with the term for what police sketch artists do. If you see either of the above folks running around on the streets with a gun, I suggest staying out of their way. :-)
– T.E.D.♦
6 hours ago
@T.E.D. Primarily, I'd suggest breathing techniques. For that If anyone sees one of the above "running around on the streets" then their trip-sitter is doing a pretty bad job.
– LangLangC
5 hours ago
I like that term (composite portrait) a lot, but when I tried looking it up, I found that's the name of a completely different photographic technique that was invented in the 19th Century, involving multiple exposures of different views of the same subject on the same photographic plate. Is this term commonly used for Arcimboldo's works too, or just by that one author?
– T.E.D.♦
6 hours ago
I like that term (composite portrait) a lot, but when I tried looking it up, I found that's the name of a completely different photographic technique that was invented in the 19th Century, involving multiple exposures of different views of the same subject on the same photographic plate. Is this term commonly used for Arcimboldo's works too, or just by that one author?
– T.E.D.♦
6 hours ago
1
1
@T.E.D. The second chapter of my referenced book is called "Arcimboldo from 1562: The creation of composite Heads".
– LangLangC
6 hours ago
@T.E.D. The second chapter of my referenced book is called "Arcimboldo from 1562: The creation of composite Heads".
– LangLangC
6 hours ago
1
1
@T.E.D. I did find a handful pages using that term. Another that's commonly used around Arcimboldo is "composite head", which strikes me as crude.
– Aaron Brick
6 hours ago
@T.E.D. I did find a handful pages using that term. Another that's commonly used around Arcimboldo is "composite head", which strikes me as crude.
– Aaron Brick
6 hours ago
1
1
@AaronBrick - It appears LLC reports seeing that one as well. It at least has the benefit of being unique, and not as confusable with the term for what police sketch artists do. If you see either of the above folks running around on the streets with a gun, I suggest staying out of their way. :-)
– T.E.D.♦
6 hours ago
@AaronBrick - It appears LLC reports seeing that one as well. It at least has the benefit of being unique, and not as confusable with the term for what police sketch artists do. If you see either of the above folks running around on the streets with a gun, I suggest staying out of their way. :-)
– T.E.D.♦
6 hours ago
@T.E.D. Primarily, I'd suggest breathing techniques. For that If anyone sees one of the above "running around on the streets" then their trip-sitter is doing a pretty bad job.
– LangLangC
5 hours ago
@T.E.D. Primarily, I'd suggest breathing techniques. For that If anyone sees one of the above "running around on the streets" then their trip-sitter is doing a pretty bad job.
– LangLangC
5 hours ago
add a comment |
I don't think Art Historians have come up with a definitive term for it, because those works of his were fairly unique for his time.
They appear to consider him part of the Mannerist movement based on not just the works you are asking about, but on his other, er... non-flora-based works, and the evolution of that work over time. So its probably reasonable to call Arcimboldo himself a mannerist, while the term remains inadequate as a descriptor for the works of his you are particularly interested in.
If he'd been working in the early 20th Century rather than the 17th, I think it would be perfectly reasonable to call him a Surrealist. But that's a movement with its own history (and sometimes associated philosophy), most of which he predated. So I suppose you could call it surrealistic, but calling it Surrealism or calling Arcimboldo a Surrealist would be an anachronism. Also, as you point out, Surrealism is a very broad category, and you're primarily interested in the one presentation technique he used.
The closest equivalents I can think of for the technique are Pointillism and Divisionalisim. In both cases the artist is making a portrait that looks normal at a distance, but upon closer inspection is made up not of strokes and coherent areas of paint, but of other objects. However, for Pointillists it is usually dots, for Divisionalists dots or small areas (almost like a mosaic), while for Arcimboldo it was representations of seemingly unrelated physical objects. Also of course Pointillism and Divisionalisim developed from Impressionism, and once again Arcimboldo predated that.
add a comment |
I don't think Art Historians have come up with a definitive term for it, because those works of his were fairly unique for his time.
They appear to consider him part of the Mannerist movement based on not just the works you are asking about, but on his other, er... non-flora-based works, and the evolution of that work over time. So its probably reasonable to call Arcimboldo himself a mannerist, while the term remains inadequate as a descriptor for the works of his you are particularly interested in.
If he'd been working in the early 20th Century rather than the 17th, I think it would be perfectly reasonable to call him a Surrealist. But that's a movement with its own history (and sometimes associated philosophy), most of which he predated. So I suppose you could call it surrealistic, but calling it Surrealism or calling Arcimboldo a Surrealist would be an anachronism. Also, as you point out, Surrealism is a very broad category, and you're primarily interested in the one presentation technique he used.
The closest equivalents I can think of for the technique are Pointillism and Divisionalisim. In both cases the artist is making a portrait that looks normal at a distance, but upon closer inspection is made up not of strokes and coherent areas of paint, but of other objects. However, for Pointillists it is usually dots, for Divisionalists dots or small areas (almost like a mosaic), while for Arcimboldo it was representations of seemingly unrelated physical objects. Also of course Pointillism and Divisionalisim developed from Impressionism, and once again Arcimboldo predated that.
add a comment |
I don't think Art Historians have come up with a definitive term for it, because those works of his were fairly unique for his time.
They appear to consider him part of the Mannerist movement based on not just the works you are asking about, but on his other, er... non-flora-based works, and the evolution of that work over time. So its probably reasonable to call Arcimboldo himself a mannerist, while the term remains inadequate as a descriptor for the works of his you are particularly interested in.
If he'd been working in the early 20th Century rather than the 17th, I think it would be perfectly reasonable to call him a Surrealist. But that's a movement with its own history (and sometimes associated philosophy), most of which he predated. So I suppose you could call it surrealistic, but calling it Surrealism or calling Arcimboldo a Surrealist would be an anachronism. Also, as you point out, Surrealism is a very broad category, and you're primarily interested in the one presentation technique he used.
The closest equivalents I can think of for the technique are Pointillism and Divisionalisim. In both cases the artist is making a portrait that looks normal at a distance, but upon closer inspection is made up not of strokes and coherent areas of paint, but of other objects. However, for Pointillists it is usually dots, for Divisionalists dots or small areas (almost like a mosaic), while for Arcimboldo it was representations of seemingly unrelated physical objects. Also of course Pointillism and Divisionalisim developed from Impressionism, and once again Arcimboldo predated that.
I don't think Art Historians have come up with a definitive term for it, because those works of his were fairly unique for his time.
They appear to consider him part of the Mannerist movement based on not just the works you are asking about, but on his other, er... non-flora-based works, and the evolution of that work over time. So its probably reasonable to call Arcimboldo himself a mannerist, while the term remains inadequate as a descriptor for the works of his you are particularly interested in.
If he'd been working in the early 20th Century rather than the 17th, I think it would be perfectly reasonable to call him a Surrealist. But that's a movement with its own history (and sometimes associated philosophy), most of which he predated. So I suppose you could call it surrealistic, but calling it Surrealism or calling Arcimboldo a Surrealist would be an anachronism. Also, as you point out, Surrealism is a very broad category, and you're primarily interested in the one presentation technique he used.
The closest equivalents I can think of for the technique are Pointillism and Divisionalisim. In both cases the artist is making a portrait that looks normal at a distance, but upon closer inspection is made up not of strokes and coherent areas of paint, but of other objects. However, for Pointillists it is usually dots, for Divisionalists dots or small areas (almost like a mosaic), while for Arcimboldo it was representations of seemingly unrelated physical objects. Also of course Pointillism and Divisionalisim developed from Impressionism, and once again Arcimboldo predated that.
edited 6 hours ago
answered 9 hours ago
T.E.D.♦T.E.D.
76.3k10171313
76.3k10171313
add a comment |
add a comment |
ComeHither is a new contributor. Be nice, and check out our Code of Conduct.
ComeHither is a new contributor. Be nice, and check out our Code of Conduct.
ComeHither is a new contributor. Be nice, and check out our Code of Conduct.
ComeHither is a new contributor. Be nice, and check out our Code of Conduct.
Thanks for contributing an answer to History Stack Exchange!
- Please be sure to answer the question. Provide details and share your research!
But avoid …
- Asking for help, clarification, or responding to other answers.
- Making statements based on opinion; back them up with references or personal experience.
To learn more, see our tips on writing great answers.
Sign up or log in
StackExchange.ready(function ()
StackExchange.helpers.onClickDraftSave('#login-link');
);
Sign up using Google
Sign up using Facebook
Sign up using Email and Password
Post as a guest
Required, but never shown
StackExchange.ready(
function ()
StackExchange.openid.initPostLogin('.new-post-login', 'https%3a%2f%2fhistory.stackexchange.com%2fquestions%2f51678%2fwhat-is-the-period-term-used-describe-giuseppe-arcimboldos-style-of-painting%23new-answer', 'question_page');
);
Post as a guest
Required, but never shown
Sign up or log in
StackExchange.ready(function ()
StackExchange.helpers.onClickDraftSave('#login-link');
);
Sign up using Google
Sign up using Facebook
Sign up using Email and Password
Post as a guest
Required, but never shown
Sign up or log in
StackExchange.ready(function ()
StackExchange.helpers.onClickDraftSave('#login-link');
);
Sign up using Google
Sign up using Facebook
Sign up using Email and Password
Post as a guest
Required, but never shown
Sign up or log in
StackExchange.ready(function ()
StackExchange.helpers.onClickDraftSave('#login-link');
);
Sign up using Google
Sign up using Facebook
Sign up using Email and Password
Sign up using Google
Sign up using Facebook
Sign up using Email and Password
Post as a guest
Required, but never shown
Required, but never shown
Required, but never shown
Required, but never shown
Required, but never shown
Required, but never shown
Required, but never shown
Required, but never shown
Required, but never shown
1
If this is about the 'style' & art history, then you already have your answer. If this is more about the phenomenon of perception, then you might want to migrate this to psychology. Please specify, answers are ready for either site, as there might be quite an overlap.
– LangLangC
9 hours ago
2
FWIW: I'm a bit of a fan of surrealistic art, and had never seen or heard of this before. Thank you so much for asking a question about it!
– T.E.D.♦
9 hours ago