What We Are Reading Today: Historical Grammar of the Visual Arts by Alois Riegl

What We Are Reading Today: Historical Grammar of the Visual Arts by Alois Riegl
Short Url
Updated 28 March 2021
Follow

What We Are Reading Today: Historical Grammar of the Visual Arts by Alois Riegl

What We Are Reading Today: Historical Grammar of the Visual Arts by Alois Riegl

Aloïs Riegl (1858–1905) was one of the greatest modern art historians. The most important member of the so-called Vienna School, Riegl developed a highly refined technique of visual or formal analysis, as opposed to the iconological method championed by Erwin Panofsky with its emphasis on decoding motifs through recourse to texts, says a review on the Princeton University Press website. 

Riegl pioneered new understandings of the changing role of the viewer, the significance of non–high art objects such as ornament and textiles, and theories of art and art history, including his much-debated neologism Kunstwollen (the will of art). Finally, his Historical Grammar of the Visual Arts, which brings together many of the diverse threads of his thought, is available to an English-language audience in a superlative translation by Yale professor Jacqueline E. Jung. 

In one of the earliest art historical “surveys,” Riegl addresses the different visual arts within a sweeping conception of the history of culture. His account derives from Hegelian models but decisively opens onto alternative pathways that refuse attempts to reduce art merely to the artist’s intentions or its social and historical functions.