Belting published his first monograph in 1962 (Die Basilica dei Ss. Martiri in Cimitile) and later authored more than thirty books, some of them translated into various languages. His essay "The End of Art History?" attracted considerable attention and Belting expanded it in successive editions.[4]
Belting died in Berlin on 10 January 2023, at age 87.[5]
Writings
Belting was known for his contributions to the field of Bildwissenschaft ("image-science"). His account of Bildwissenschaft sought to develop an anthropological theory of the image to examine its universal functions that span cultural distinctions, and considered the relationship between the image and the body.[6] Belting examined images used in religious contexts to identify the original non-artistic functions of images today considered art objects, and argued that "art" was a unit of analysis had emerged in the 16th century that obstructed corporeal engagements with images.[7]
In Likeness and Presence (1990), Belting argued for the necessity of understanding the ways images give meaning to their contexts, rather than gaining meaning from their contexts, to understand images as actors with their own agency.[8] Belting argued that art history as a disciplinary formation was outmoded and potentially obsolete,[9] and that a Bildwissenschaft capable of apprehending all kinds of images, the exact scope and methods of which remain uncertain, should be sought.[10] Pioneering the development of a global perspective on art studies and museum practice was the research project GAM – Global Art and the Museum, which Belting initiated in 2006 with Peter Weibel and Andrea Buddensieg at the ZKM Center for Art and Media Karlsruhe. The project, which ran until 2016, took a look at new museum practices and the worldwide development of art biennials that have emerged beyond "Euramerica" (John Clark) since the end of the 1980s.[11] The project included the exhibition and publication The Global Contemporary: Art Worlds after 1989 (2011–2012) at ZKM | Center or Art and Media Karlsruhe.[12]
—— (2011). Florence and Baghdad: Renaissance art and Arab science. Cambridge, Mass.: Belknap Press of Harvard University Press. ISBN978-0-674-05004-4. OCLC701493612.
——; Dunlap, Thomas (2011). An Anthropology of Images: Picture, Medium, Body. Princeton: Princeton University Press. ISBN978-0-691-14500-6. OCLC691205559.
—— (2009). Looking through Duchamp's door: art and perspective in the work of Duchamp, Sugimoto, Jeff Wall. Köln: Verlag der Buchhandlung Walther König. ISBN978-3-86560-605-1. OCLC499093764.
——; Buddensieg, Andrea; Araújo, Emanoel; Global Art and the Museum; Internationales Forschungszentrum Kulturwissenschaften; Zentrum für Kunst und Medientechnologie Karlsruhe (2009). The global art world: audiences, markets, and museums. Ostfildern: Hatje Cantz. ISBN978-3-7757-2407-4. OCLC427296651.
——; Birken, Jacob; Buddensieg, Andrea; Weibel, Peter; Binter, Julia T. S. (2011). Global studies: mapping contemporary art and culture. Ostfildern, Germany: Hatje Cantz. ISBN978-3-7757-3202-4. OCLC767534541.
—— (2001). The invisible masterpiece. Translated by Atkins, Helen. Chicago: University of Chicago Press. ISBN0-226-04265-0. OCLC46401602.
—— (1998). The Germans and their art: a troublesome relationship. New Haven: Yale University Press. ISBN0-300-07616-9. OCLC38468736.
——; Jephcott, E. F. N. (1994). Likeness and presence: a history of the image before the era of art. Chicago: University of Chicago Press. ISBN0-226-04214-6. OCLC27769840.
—— (1990). The image and its public in the Middle Ages: form and function of early paintings of the Passion. New Rochelle, N.Y.: A.D. Caratzas. ISBN0-89241-403-0. OCLC19623960.
—— (1989). Max Beckmann: tradition as a problem in modern art. New York: Timken Publishers. ISBN0-943221-06-4. OCLC20261141.
——; Wood, Christopher S. (1987). The end of the history of art?. Chicago: University of Chicago Press. ISBN0-226-04217-0. OCLC14359049.
Chapters
Hans Belting, "The Migration of Images. An Encounter with Figuration in Islamic Art", in Dynamis of the Image. Moving Images in a Global World, eds. Emmanuel Alloa & Chiara Cappelletto, Berlin-New York: De Gruyter 2021, Series "Contact Zones", pp. 63-78, doi=10.1515/9783110530544-004
^Das Ende der Kunstgeschichte? (1983) was first read at a conference held at the Munich University in 1980, and ten years later as revised as Das Ende der Kunstgeschichte : eine Revision nach zehn Jahren, 1995 (ISBN3-406-38543-5); an English translation was produced as Art History after Modernism, Chicago, 2003 (ISBN0-226-04184-0)
^Rampley, Matthew (2012). "Bildwissenschaft: Theories of the Image in German-Language Scholarship". In Rampley, Matthew; Lenain, Thierry; Locher, Hubert; Pinotti, Andrea; Schoell-Glass, Charlotte; Zijlmans, Kitty (eds.). Art History and Visual Studies in Europe: Transnational Discourses and National Frameworks. Brill Publishers. p. 126.
^Craven, David (2014). "The New German Art History: From Ideological Critique and the Warburg Renaissance to the Bildwissenschaft of the Three Bs". Art in Translation. 6 (2): 143. doi:10.2752/175613114X13998876655059. S2CID192985575.