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Echoes : painterly repetitions and revisions in an age of digitally mediated images

The mediation of landscape in painting is explored by looking at a specific case in the Romantic tradition (Caspar David Friedrich) in relation to contemporary painting, which highlights a shift from a view of a utopian unmediated landscape to our present reconfigurations of fragmented past, sourced...

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Main Author: Aikman, Jake
Other Authors: Inggs, Stephen
Format: Thesis
Language:English
Published: Michaelis School of Fine Art 2024
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access_status_str Open Access
author Aikman, Jake
author2 Inggs, Stephen
author_browse Aikman, Jake
Inggs, Stephen
author_facet Inggs, Stephen
Aikman, Jake
author_sort Aikman, Jake
collection Thesis
description The mediation of landscape in painting is explored by looking at a specific case in the Romantic tradition (Caspar David Friedrich) in relation to contemporary painting, which highlights a shift from a view of a utopian unmediated landscape to our present reconfigurations of fragmented past, sourced from mediated images. In section two a theoretical and historical context for situating my practice is discussed. Examples of repetition from early Modernism through to the Pop Art movement highlight the differences and similarities of my intentions in the practical work. In addition, the thematic component of the project is discussed specifically with regard to the prevalence of affinities with the thematic interests from the movement referred to as Romanticism. For the purposes of explicating an historical framing of my project, the focus on Romanticism is restricted to the paintings of Caspar David Friedrich as apposed to providing a survey of an entire movement. The return of romantic themes in my own practice and within a broader contemporary practice is argued to be another form of repetition, thus expanding the scope of repetition rather than dividing the project into separate components. Section three discusses contemporary examples of artists who have influenced my research project and specific works relating to the topic of repetition are examined. This section also links the earlier discussion of Friedrich's romantic painting with contemporary artists, namely Peter Doig and Christopher Orr, associated with the current ressurgence of artists adopting and adapting the spirit and thematic concerns of Romanticism in contemporary practice. Section four examines the methodology and process of my research project. I start by framing the context for the practical processes employed and how they developed. I discuss how, through the process of implicating these methods, a dialogue between technical strategy and content arose. Section five illustrates and provides a detailed discussion of the individual works produced for the exhibition.
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institution University of Cape Town (South Africa)
language eng
last_indexed 2026-06-10T12:32:34.479Z
license_str Not specified — see source repository
provenance_str_mv Harvested via OAI-PMH from UCTD — University of Cape Town Open Access Repository
publishDate 2024
publishDateRange 2024
publishDateSort 2024
publisher Michaelis School of Fine Art
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source_str UCTD — University of Cape Town Open Access Repository
spelling oai:open.uct.ac.za:11427/39169 Echoes : painterly repetitions and revisions in an age of digitally mediated images Aikman, Jake Inggs, Stephen Painting, Modern - 21st century, South African Theses and Dissertations, Fine Art The mediation of landscape in painting is explored by looking at a specific case in the Romantic tradition (Caspar David Friedrich) in relation to contemporary painting, which highlights a shift from a view of a utopian unmediated landscape to our present reconfigurations of fragmented past, sourced from mediated images. In section two a theoretical and historical context for situating my practice is discussed. Examples of repetition from early Modernism through to the Pop Art movement highlight the differences and similarities of my intentions in the practical work. In addition, the thematic component of the project is discussed specifically with regard to the prevalence of affinities with the thematic interests from the movement referred to as Romanticism. For the purposes of explicating an historical framing of my project, the focus on Romanticism is restricted to the paintings of Caspar David Friedrich as apposed to providing a survey of an entire movement. The return of romantic themes in my own practice and within a broader contemporary practice is argued to be another form of repetition, thus expanding the scope of repetition rather than dividing the project into separate components. Section three discusses contemporary examples of artists who have influenced my research project and specific works relating to the topic of repetition are examined. This section also links the earlier discussion of Friedrich's romantic painting with contemporary artists, namely Peter Doig and Christopher Orr, associated with the current ressurgence of artists adopting and adapting the spirit and thematic concerns of Romanticism in contemporary practice. Section four examines the methodology and process of my research project. I start by framing the context for the practical processes employed and how they developed. I discuss how, through the process of implicating these methods, a dialogue between technical strategy and content arose. Section five illustrates and provides a detailed discussion of the individual works produced for the exhibition. 2024-02-23T06:10:47Z 2024-02-23T06:10:47Z 2008 2024-02-23T06:10:20Z Thesis / Dissertation Masters Master of Fine Arts http://hdl.handle.net/11427/39169 eng application/pdf Michaelis School of Fine Art Faculty of Humanities
spellingShingle Painting, Modern - 21st century, South African Theses and Dissertations, Fine Art
Aikman, Jake
Echoes : painterly repetitions and revisions in an age of digitally mediated images
thesis_degree_str Master's
title Echoes : painterly repetitions and revisions in an age of digitally mediated images
title_full Echoes : painterly repetitions and revisions in an age of digitally mediated images
title_fullStr Echoes : painterly repetitions and revisions in an age of digitally mediated images
title_full_unstemmed Echoes : painterly repetitions and revisions in an age of digitally mediated images
title_short Echoes : painterly repetitions and revisions in an age of digitally mediated images
title_sort echoes painterly repetitions and revisions in an age of digitally mediated images
topic Painting, Modern - 21st century, South African Theses and Dissertations, Fine Art
url http://hdl.handle.net/11427/39169
work_keys_str_mv AT aikmanjake echoespainterlyrepetitionsandrevisionsinanageofdigitallymediatedimages