Likeness and Presence: A History of the Image Before the Era of Art

Front Cover
University of Chicago Press, 1994 - Art - 651 pages
Before the Renaissance and Reformation, holy images - the only independent images then in existence - were treated not as "art" but as objects of veneration. The faithful believed that these images, through their likeness to the person represented, became a tangible presence of the Holy and were able to work miracles, deliver oracles, and bring victory on the battlefield. In this magisterial book, one of the world's leading scholars of medieval art traces the long history of the image and its changing role in European culture. Belting's study of the iconic portrait opens in late antiquity, when Christianity reversed its original ban on images, adapted the cult images of the "pagans", and began developing an iconography of its own. The heart of the work focuses on the Middle Ages, both East and West, when images of God and the saints underwent many significant changes either as icons or as statues. The final section of Likeness and Presence surveys the Reformation and Renaissance periods, when new attitudes toward images inaugurated what Belting calls the "era of art" that continues to the present day - an era during which the aesthetic quality has become the dominant aspect of the image. Belting neither "explains" images nor pretends that images explain themselves. Rather, he works from the conviction that images reveal their meaning best by their use. Likeness and Presence deals with the beliefs, superstitions, hopes, and fears that come into play as people handle and respond to sacred images. Recognizing the tensions between image and word inherent in religion, Belting includes in an appendix many important historical documents that relate to the history and use of images. Profuselyillustrated, Likeness and Presence presents a compelling interpretation of the place of the image in Western history.
 

Contents

III
1
IV
9
V
14
VI
17
VIII
19
IX
21
X
25
XI
26
LXII
226
LXIII
228
LXIV
230
LXV
233
LXVI
249
LXVII
261
LXIX
262
LXX
265

XII
30
XIV
32
XV
36
XVI
41
XVII
47
XVIII
49
XIX
57
XX
59
XXI
63
XXII
73
XXIII
78
XXV
80
XXVI
82
XXVII
88
XXVIII
98
XXIX
102
XXXI
103
XXXII
107
XXXIII
109
XXXIV
115
XXXVI
121
XXXVII
126
XXXVIII
129
XXXIX
134
XL
139
XLI
144
XLIII
146
XLIV
149
XLV
155
XLVI
164
XLVIII
167
XLIX
170
L
172
LI
173
LII
184
LIII
185
LIV
188
LV
192
LVI
195
LVII
208
LVIII
209
LIX
213
LX
215
LXI
225
LXXI
269
LXXII
272
LXXIII
281
LXXIV
297
LXXV
299
LXXVI
301
LXXVII
303
LXXVIII
304
LXXIX
311
LXXX
314
LXXXI
320
LXXXII
323
LXXXIII
330
LXXXV
333
LXXXVI
337
LXXXVII
342
LXXXVIII
349
LXXXIX
354
XC
362
XCI
370
XCII
377
XCIV
384
XCV
398
XCVI
404
XCVII
409
XCVIII
410
XCIX
419
C
425
CI
432
CII
442
CIII
443
CIV
455
CV
460
CVI
461
CVII
467
CVIII
472
CIX
480
CX
486
CXI
493
CXII
559
CXIII
607
CXIV
619
CXV
635
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About the author (1994)

Hans Belting (1935-2023) was the Mary Jane Crowe Professor of Art History at Northwestern University. His books include The End of the History of Art?, Likeness and Presence: A History of the Image before the Era of Art, and The Invisible Masterpiece, all published by the University of Chicago Press.

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