Authors: FranCois Jullien, Jane Marie Todd
ISBN-13: 9780226415307, ISBN-10: 0226415309
Format: Hardcover
Publisher: University of Chicago Press
Date Published: November 2009
Edition: 2nd Edition
François Jullien is professor of Chinese philosophy and literature at the University of Paris VII and director of the Institut Marcel Granet.
In premodern China, elite painters used imagery not to mirror the world around them, but to evoke unfathomable experience. Considering their art alongside the philosophical traditions that inform it, The Great Image Has No Form explores the “nonobject”—a notion exemplified by paintings that do not seek to represent observable surroundings.
François Jullien argues that this nonobjectifying approach stems from the painters’ deeply held belief in a continuum of existence, in which art is not distinct from reality. Contrasting this perspective with the Western notion of art as separate from the world it represents, Jullien investigates the theoretical conditions that allow us to apprehend, isolate, and abstract objects. His comparative method lays bare the assumptions of Chinese and European thought, revitalizing the questions of what painting is, where it comes from, and what it does. Provocative and intellectually vigorous, this sweeping inquiry introduces new ways of thinking about the relationship of art to the ideas in which it is rooted.
List of Illustrations
Translator’s Note
Preface
Web of Texts and Corpus
1. Presence-Absence
2. From the Foundation-Fount of Painting
3. Vague-Drab-Indistinct
4. The Great Image Has No Form
5. Theory of the Sketch
6. Empty and Full
7. Not Quitting, Not Sticking
8. Quitting Form to Achieve Resemblance
9. The Spirit of a Landscape
10. On the Truth in Painting
11. Gaze or Contemplation?
12. Peindre n’est pas dépeindre
13. Ink and Brush, Form and Color
14. What Does Painting Write?
15. Image-Phenomenon: Painting Transformation and Life
Gallery of Chinese Paintings
Glossary of Chinese Expressions
Notes
Index