Inventing Falsehood, Making Truth: Vico and Neapolitan Painting

Inventing Falsehood, Making Truth: Vico and Neapolitan Painting

by Malcolm Bull
Inventing Falsehood, Making Truth: Vico and Neapolitan Painting

Inventing Falsehood, Making Truth: Vico and Neapolitan Painting

by Malcolm Bull

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Overview

How the philosophy of Giambattista Vico was influenced by eighteenth-century Neopolitan painting

Can painting transform philosophy? In Inventing Falsehood, Making Truth, Malcolm Bull looks at Neapolitan art around 1700 through the eyes of the philosopher Giambattista Vico. Surrounded by extravagant examples of late Baroque painting by artists like Luca Giordano and Francesco Solimena, Vico concluded that human truth was a product of the imagination. Truth was not something that could be observed: instead, it was something made in the way that paintings were made--through the exercise of fantasy.

Juxtaposing paintings and texts, Bull presents the masterpieces of late Baroque painting in early eighteenth-century Naples from an entirely new perspective. Revealing the close connections between the arguments of the philosophers and the arguments of the painters, he shows how Vico drew on both in his influential philosophy of history, The New Science. Bull suggests that painting can serve not just as an illustration for philosophical arguments, but also as the model for them--that painting itself has sometimes been a form of epistemological experiment, and that, perhaps surprisingly, the Neapolitan Baroque may have been one of the routes through which modern consciousness was formed.


Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781400849741
Publisher: Princeton University Press
Publication date: 12/03/2013
Series: Essays in the Arts
Sold by: Barnes & Noble
Format: eBook
Pages: 160
File size: 8 MB

About the Author

Malcolm Bull is university lecturer in fine art at the University of Oxford. His previous books include Anti-Nietzsche, The Mirror of the Gods, and Seeing Things Hidden.

Table of Contents

Acknowledgments ix
Prologue xi
ONE Vico 1
TWO Icastic Painting 43
THREE Fantastic Painting 69
FOUR Theological Painting 101
Epilogue 121
Notes 127
Index 141

What People are Saying About This

From the Publisher

"Bull is a scholar with a gift for traversing traditional disciplinary boundaries, and his book acknowledges, as has rarely been done before, the wide philosophical dimensions of artistic practice in the 'long seventeenth century.' Given its originality of focus, this synthesis helps reconceptualize the period in a new way."—Tom Nichols, University of Glasgow

"Malcolm Bull is an extraordinary writer—lucid, far reaching, and entirely original. His book explains how painting does not merely provide the subject for philosophical debate when we interpret, but also, quite by itself, manifests a form of philosophical thinking. In what way do the fantasies represented in art manifest a truthful way of thinking? This book offers the answer."—David Carrier, coauthor of Wild Art

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