Here, for the first time in English, is Pacht's well-known, fundamental
text, Methodisches zur Kunsthistorischen Praxis. Pacht's approach to
art history is shaped by his conviction that visual art, like music, can
say things in its own medium that cannot be said in any other. He aims
to sharpen our perceptions by recreating the social and cultural context
in which an object was made, clarifying unfamiliar notions of space and
time or significant gestures and symbols which are no longer
recognizable. Each part of Pacht's analysis is illustrated by reference
to a specific manuscript, painting, building or sculpture, and his
examples range from medieval and Renaissance art through to the works of
Rembrandt. He explores the theories of major thinkers from Riegl,
Wolfflin and Croce to Panofsky and Gombrich. But the emphasis always
returns to the activity of looking, and Pacht's greatest achievement is
in showing the student and general reader alike how to practise art
history in their own encounters with works of art.