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dc.contributor.authorKanter, Laurence-
dc.date.accessioned2011-02-24T14:53:13Z-
dc.date.available2011-02-24T14:53:13Z-
dc.date.issued2011-02-24T14:53:13Z-
dc.identifier.urihttp://hdl.handle.net/2451/29910-
dc.descriptionConference paper presented March 25-26, 2011.en
dc.description.abstract'We need not even speak of the absence of color. Photography has not yet learnt to reproduce that with any accuracy or reliability.' Richard Offner, 'An Outline of a Theory of Method,' 'Studies in Florentine Painting,' 1927 Among the least well-known and most under-utilized resources at the Institute of Fine Arts in New York is the photograph collection amassed by Richard Offner during his four decades as Professor there. Offner's photo archive differs materially from comparable collections assembled by his predecessor, Bernard Berenson, or such collections as those formed by his contemporary, Gertrude Coor, or pupil, James Stubblebine (the latter two also preserved at the Institute of Fine Arts), in that it was not principally meant as a tool for sorting large categories within the history of art but rather as an aid to making fine distinctions within categories, congruent with Offner's aims as a connoisseur. Also unlike the compiler of any other art history photo archive, Offner was acutely sensitive to the limitations of photography as much as he was to its benefits. 'If photography were an entirely mechanical process it would render the pictorial object with a calculable difference from it. Unhappily, photography is largely an interpretative affair. It has this in common with general artistic practice, that the result is determined by the whim and genius of the operator, and the camera is only one of the determinants of the result.' (Offner, Ibid., 1927) Thus, Offner's objection to color was only in part due to the lag in photographic technology. It was more fundamentally an objection to introducing one more subjective, uncontrollable variable to his research material.en
dc.description.sponsorshipConference supported by the Samuel H. Kress Foundation, the NYU Humanities Initiative, the IFA Visual Resources Collections, and Princeton University, Department of Art and Archaeology, Visual Resources Collection.en
dc.language.isoen_USen
dc.rightsCopyright Laurence Kanter, 2011.en
dc.subjectOffner, Richarden
dc.subjectphoto archivesen
dc.subjectconnoisseurshipen
dc.subjectphotography-
dc.titleThe Richard Offner Photo Archives at the Institute of Fine Arts: Seeing Paintings in Black-and-White, or Methodologies of Connoisseurshipen
dc.typeDocumenten
Appears in Collections:Photo Archives and the Photographic Memory of Art History, part III

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