Images of the 'Exotic'? Gottfried Lindauer in the Context of European Portraiture

In 1886, twelve of Gottfried Lindauer’s portraits formed part of the presentation of the British colony New Zealand at the Colonial and Indian Exhibition in London. For the European public, in this context these portraits represented ‘Otherness’, for they were exhibited – and in this way ‘naturalize...

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Main Author: Karentzos, Alexandra
Format: Article
Language:deu
Published: International Association of Research Institutes in the History of Art (RIHA) 2018-07-01
Series:RIHA Journal
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.riha-journal.org/articles/2018/0189-0197-special-issue-gottfried-lindauer/0193-karentzos
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author Karentzos, Alexandra
author_facet Karentzos, Alexandra
author_sort Karentzos, Alexandra
collection DOAJ
description In 1886, twelve of Gottfried Lindauer’s portraits formed part of the presentation of the British colony New Zealand at the Colonial and Indian Exhibition in London. For the European public, in this context these portraits represented ‘Otherness’, for they were exhibited – and in this way ‘naturalized’ – together with cultural artefacts, members of the indigenous population performing handcrafts, and specimens of nature in greenhouses. The paintings were functionalized into ethnographic-documentary, ‘authentic’ representations of Māori culture. Within this exhibition glorifying colonial power, they were turned into objects displaying British scientific knowledge and prestige. This essay reads Lindauer’s paintings in the context of nineteenth-century European portraiture, a genre where exotic colonial goods and plants were appropriated as luxury items. The resultant constellation marked by exoticizing self-representation in Europe and exoticizing representation of ‘indigenous’ Others reveals the uniqueness of Lindauer’s work, which defies such a schematic classification of exoticization: the portraits were in part commissioned by Māori who wished a pictorial representation of themselves or their relatives. By presenting the Māori nobly as large-sized figures in the portrait genre, Lindauer’s paintings simultaneously offer the scope for various readings.
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spelling doaj.art-74ef137789674faa9a053e39b66b6d612023-11-02T07:24:46ZdeuInternational Association of Research Institutes in the History of Art (RIHA)RIHA Journal2190-33282018-07-010193Images of the 'Exotic'? Gottfried Lindauer in the Context of European PortraitureKarentzos, AlexandraIn 1886, twelve of Gottfried Lindauer’s portraits formed part of the presentation of the British colony New Zealand at the Colonial and Indian Exhibition in London. For the European public, in this context these portraits represented ‘Otherness’, for they were exhibited – and in this way ‘naturalized’ – together with cultural artefacts, members of the indigenous population performing handcrafts, and specimens of nature in greenhouses. The paintings were functionalized into ethnographic-documentary, ‘authentic’ representations of Māori culture. Within this exhibition glorifying colonial power, they were turned into objects displaying British scientific knowledge and prestige. This essay reads Lindauer’s paintings in the context of nineteenth-century European portraiture, a genre where exotic colonial goods and plants were appropriated as luxury items. The resultant constellation marked by exoticizing self-representation in Europe and exoticizing representation of ‘indigenous’ Others reveals the uniqueness of Lindauer’s work, which defies such a schematic classification of exoticization: the portraits were in part commissioned by Māori who wished a pictorial representation of themselves or their relatives. By presenting the Māori nobly as large-sized figures in the portrait genre, Lindauer’s paintings simultaneously offer the scope for various readings.https://www.riha-journal.org/articles/2018/0189-0197-special-issue-gottfried-lindauer/0193-karentzosGottfried LindauerPortrait PaintingNew ZealandNineteenth CenturyColonial and Indian Exhibition London 1886ExoticizationOtherness
spellingShingle Karentzos, Alexandra
Images of the 'Exotic'? Gottfried Lindauer in the Context of European Portraiture
RIHA Journal
Gottfried Lindauer
Portrait Painting
New Zealand
Nineteenth Century
Colonial and Indian Exhibition London 1886
Exoticization
Otherness
title Images of the 'Exotic'? Gottfried Lindauer in the Context of European Portraiture
title_full Images of the 'Exotic'? Gottfried Lindauer in the Context of European Portraiture
title_fullStr Images of the 'Exotic'? Gottfried Lindauer in the Context of European Portraiture
title_full_unstemmed Images of the 'Exotic'? Gottfried Lindauer in the Context of European Portraiture
title_short Images of the 'Exotic'? Gottfried Lindauer in the Context of European Portraiture
title_sort images of the exotic gottfried lindauer in the context of european portraiture
topic Gottfried Lindauer
Portrait Painting
New Zealand
Nineteenth Century
Colonial and Indian Exhibition London 1886
Exoticization
Otherness
url https://www.riha-journal.org/articles/2018/0189-0197-special-issue-gottfried-lindauer/0193-karentzos
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