Our Beautiful, Dry, and Distant Texts: Art History as Writing

Pennsylvania State University Press (1997)
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Abstract

How do psychoanalytic, semiotic, deconstructive, and other interpretations represent works of art? What can they see, and what must they miss? In _Our Beautiful, Dry, and Distant Texts_, Elkins suggests that the philosophic problems posed by these questions are essentially insuperable because philosophy makes demands of visual artifacts that they can answer only by becoming mirror images of philosophic discourse. Elkins argues that writing is what art historians produce, and, whether such writing is a transparent vehicle for the transmission of facts or an embattled forum for the rehearsal of institutional relations and constructions of history, it is an expressive medium, with the capacity for emotion and reflection. Therefore, it needs to be taken seriously for its own sake: it is the testament of art history and of individual historians, and it is only weakened and slighted by versions of history that imagine it either as uncontrolled dissemination or objective discovery and reporting. Elkins's investigation is not a prescription for opening art history to new influences or for focusing it on particular problems. It is a plea for circumspection in the entire endeavor of trying to force images into words, and in the curious vocation of writing the history of art

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James Elkins
School of the Art Institute of Chicago

Citations of this work

Reading Pictures: the Impossible Dream?Ross Woodrow - 2010 - Analysis and Metaphysics 9:62-75.
Logic and images in art history.James Elkins - 1999 - Perspectives on Science 7 (2):151-180.

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