Picture quote (art)

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In the visual arts and architecture, a picture quotation is understood to mean the adoption of a single form element from another work as a conscious reference to this foreign work (e.g. in the sense of a witty symbolic or alienating allusion). The quotation wants to be recognized as such and thereby creates a contextual relationship to the quoted work. Meaningful motifs can also be quoted.

As an independent means of expression in art, the quotation differs significantly (ie in terms of content) from the copy, from the resumption and further development (e.g. of a motif) and gradually from the formal allusion.

The copyright term image quotation must be strictly distinguished from this .

literature

  • Margaret Aston: The King's Bedpost: Reformation and Iconography in a Tudor Group Portrait. Cambridge Univ. Press, Cambridge et al. a. 1994, ISBN 0-521-44375-X . (about a picture quote from the 16th century in the painting Edwardt VI and the Pope from an engraving by Philip Galle after Maarten van Heemskerck )