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Agrégation 2001 : image analysis

Responsable : Professeur Marie-Madeleine Martinet

 
INNER ARTICULATIONS
 
FRAMES WITHIN FRAMES ARCHITECTURE WITHIN PAINTING
http://www.nationalgallery.org.uk

in ‘search’ facility, type ‘cognoscenti’
Detail from Cognoscenti in a Room hung with Pictures (c.1620)

http://www.tate.org.uk/

in ‘search’ facility, type ‘Scott’
Samuel Scott, An Arch of Westminster Bridge(c. 1750)

Paintings usually vary the spatial effect by articulating frames within frames, sometimes explicitly as in this view of a collector’s paradise, which opens vistas in different directions:
  • Multiples directions
    • some of the frames are placed parallel to the picture plane (the gold frame in the foreground, the greyish frames on the wall), creating a miniature vista within the major one
    • other frames are oblique, such as the black frame on the stool, which is itself oblique; since it is placed behind the foreground painting and in front of the paintings on the wall, it acts as an intermediary between them
  • Overlapping forms, which emphasise depth by showing some objects in front of others
    • the gold frame in the foreground partly covers the lower right-hand corner of the black frame on the stool, but not that of the grey frame on the right
    • the figures overlap and also partly cover the pictures (the hats and plumes interrupt the horizontal line of the grey frame to the left)
  • Shadow effects link the various motifs: the horizontal shadows of the figures link up with the paintings placed on the floor.
It is the opposite process: the ‘frame within the frame’ is not a detail within the whole, on the contrary the major part of space is included in it.
  • The cityscape is seen through it. It emphasises depth, since the banks of the Thames from Westminster towards the City are twice removed from the viewer, being beyond the bridge.
  • Subjectively, it represents the viewer’s gaze framing the view, as if looking through a telescope, and suggesting by its very fragmentariness the breadth of the implicit view beyond it.
    • the bridge acts as a second frame within the painting
    • its curved shape suggests the round or oval frames which agree with the cone of vision
 
 
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AGREGATION 2001
Image analysis
Landscape & Hypermedia
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