Upside-down_painting

Upside-down painting

Upside-down painting

Practice of hanging paintings in inverted orientation


Most paintings are intended to be hung in a precise orientation, defining an upper part and a lower part. Some paintings are displayed upside down, sometimes by mistake since the image does not represent an easily recognizable oriented subject and lacks a signature or by a deliberate decision of the exhibitor.

Examples

New York City as exhibited (🔝)
New York City in the intended orientation (🔝)
Long Grass With Butterflies, 1890
The portrait of Philip V
  • Josep Amorós's portrait of Philip V of Spain hangs upside down at the Almodí of Xàtiva [Wikidata], Spain. The king ordered the burning of Xàtiva in 1701, during the War of the Spanish Succession.[8]
  • Georg Baselitz used a painting by Louis-Ferdinand von Rayski, Wermsdorf Woods, as a model, in order to paint his first picture with an inverted motif: The Wood On Its Head (1969).[10] By inverting his paintings, the artist is able to emphasize the organisation of colours and form and confront the viewer with the picture's surface rather than the personal content of the image. In this sense, the paintings are empty and not subject to interpretation. Instead, one can only look at them.[11]

When both orientations are valid

Arcimboldo's The Cook reversed (🔝) and the right way up (🔝). See also The Fruit Basket and The Gardener.

Some works display rotational symmetry or are ambiguous figures that allow both orientations to be meaningful. Giuseppe Arcimboldo painted several works that are still lifes in one orientation and related portraits in the other.

See also

  • Spolia (fragments of sculpture and architecture recycled in new buildings) may not be in the original orientation for ideological or pragmatical reasons. An example is the blocks in the shape of a Medusa head reused as column bases in the Basilica Cistern of Constantinople.
  • Pittura infamante, a genre depicting enemies hanging from their feet.
  • Aerial landscape art – Visual art depicting the appearance of a landscape as viewed from an aircraft or spacecraft
  • 🔝, a symbol to show the top side of an object.
  • Denny Dent, an artist who sometimes painted upside-down portraits on stage before turning the canvas right-side-up for the audience

References

  1. "Piet Mondrian artwork displayed upside down for 75 years". BBC News. October 28, 2022.
  2. Hülsmeier, dpa, Dorothea (October 27, 2022). "Mondrian: Berühmtes Bild hängt seit Jahrzehnten falsch herum". Berliner Zeitung.
  3. Gómez Ruiz, Lara (2 November 2022). "Este cuadro está del revés: Mondrian, Matisse y otros artistas con obras que fueron mal colgadas". La Vanguardia (in Spanish). Retrieved 2 November 2022.
  4. Gohr, Siegfried. "Georg Baselitz. Kunst als Akt des Schaffens und Zerstörens. In: Detlef Bluemler". Künstler – Kritisches Lexikon der Gegenwartskunst. 18: 3ff.
  5. Calvocoressi, Richard (1985). "A Source for the Inverted Imagery in Georg Baselitz's Painting". The Burlington Magazine. 127 (993): 894–899. JSTOR 882264.

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