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Figure and likeness : on the limits of representation in Byzantine iconoclasm

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"Figure and Likeness" presents a thought-provoking new account of Byzantine iconoclasm - the fundamental crisis in Christian visual representation during the eighth and ninth centuries that defined the terms of Christianity's relationship to the painted image.

Charles Barber rejects the conventional means of analyzing this crisis, which seeks its origin in political and other social factors.

Instead, he argues, iconoclasm is primarily a matter of theology and aesthetic theory.

Working between the theological texts and the visual materials, Barber demonstrates that in challenging the validity of iconic representation, iconoclasts were asking: how can an image depict an incomprehensible God?

In response, iconophile theologians gradually developed a notion of representation that distinguished the work of art from the subject it depicted.

As such, Barber concludes, they were forced to move the language describing the icon beyond that of theology.

This pivotal step allowed these theologians, of whom Patriarch Nikephoros and Theodore of Stoudios were the most important, to define and defend a specifically Christian art. In highlighting this outcome and also in offering a full and clearly rendered account of iconoclastic notions of Christian representation, Barber reveals that the notion of art was indeed central to the unfolding of iconoclasm.

The implications of this study reach well beyond the dispute it considers.

Barber fundamentally revises not only our understanding of Byzantine art in the years succeeding the iconoclastic dispute, but also of Christian painting in the centuries to come.

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Product Details
Princeton University Press
0691091773 / 9780691091778
Hardback
13/10/2002
United States
English
207 p. : ill.
27 cm
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Charles Barber has written an important book. Taking as a challenge the widely held view that iconoclasm was the work of theologians that had little to do with the actual production of art, he succeeds in demonstrating the contrary. His arguments are precise, his writing clean, and his conclusions subtle and careful. The result is a book that will spark debate as it forces scholars to reconsider basic assumptions. At the same time, it introduces the complex subject in a manner totally accessible to a nonspecialist audience. -- Herbert L. Kessler, Johns Hopkins University This book aims to reco
Charles Barber has written an important book. Taking as a challenge the widely held view that iconoclasm was the work of theologians that had little to do with the actual production of art, he succeeds in demonstrating the contrary. His arguments are precise, his writing clean, and his conclusions subtle and careful. The result is a book that will spark debate as it forces scholars to reconsider basic assumptions. At the same time, it introduces the complex subject in a manner totally accessible to a nonspecialist audience. -- Herbert L. Kessler, Johns Hopkins University This book aims to reco 1QDAZ Byzantine Empire, 3D BCE to c 500 CE, ACK History of art: Byzantine & Medieval art c 500 CE to c 1400, AGR Religious subjects depicted in art, HRC Christianity