Distinguished from purely formalistic research methods, iconography pursues the interpretation of the hidden historical and humanistic connotations behind artworks, and is a discipline that combines visual text and content analysis methods. Combining the three stages of iconography proposed by Panofsky, the paper studies Shizeng Chen’s Viewing Paintings from the perspective of iconography, summarizing the formation and change of the images and contents of the artworks in the cultural system and civilization at that time, as well as their implied ideology, and analyzing the hidden spirit of the times and the historical significance behind them, so as to expound their iconographic significance. Through an in-depth discussion at three levels: pre-pictorial iconographic description, iconographic analysis, and iconographic interpretation, the facts and surface contents reproduced in the images, the traditional level of literary, artistic, and cultural knowledge, as well as the interpretation of the potential meanings are revealed.
Liu D, 2020, The Logical Development of Chinese Art, Jiangsu Phoenix Art Press, Nanjing, 292.
Jian H, Chen S, 1981, Chinese Painter Series—Chen Shizeng, Shanghai People’s Fine Arts Publishing House, Shanghai, 6.
Panofsky E, 1987, The Meaning of Visual Art, Liaoning People’s Publishing House, Shenyang.
Han C, Chen Z, Xing L, 2017, History of Chinese Image Culture (Original Volume), China Photography Press, Beijing, 232.
Zhao P, 2021, Early Period of the Republic of China 1912–1928 Study of Chinese Painting in the Beijing Area Late Subsidized Project of the National Social Science Foundation, Culture and Art Press, Beijing, 205.
Panofsky E, 2022, A Study of Iconography, The Commercial Press, Shanghai.