Aesthetics and Painting introduces
and opens up current debates and ideas in the aesthetics of painting.
At the book's center is an investigation of the complex relationship
between what a painting depicts and the means by which it is depicted.
The book looks at: how and why painting may be distinguished from other
art forms; the relationship between the painted surface and the depicted
subject; the "rules of representation" specific to painting; abstract
art and nonrepresentational painting; the most recent technological and
aesthetic developments and their implications; the role of the
artist-and that of the spectator. A sophisticated treatment of major
ideas in art and philosophy, Aesthetics and Painting remains highly readable throughout, offering a clear and coherent account of the nature of painting as an art form.