artbull-visual-analysis
GitHub用于艺术史文章中的视觉与形式分析,指导通过精确描述构图、媒介和笔触等细节来阐释意义。要求每项视觉主张必须对应编号图片,区分观察与推断,避免主观形容词堆砌,确保论证基于可验证的图像证据。
Trigger Scenarios
Install
npx skills add brycewang-stanford/Awesome-Journal-Skills --skill artbull-visual-analysis -g -y
SKILL.md
Frontmatter
{
"name": "artbull-visual-analysis",
"description": "Use when performing the close visual and formal analysis that anchors an Art Bulletin article — describing and interpreting composition, form, medium, facture, scale, and viewing conditions of specific works, tied to numbered figures. Close looking is the discipline's core method. Guides the analysis; it does not invent what is not in the object."
}
Visual & Formal Analysis (artbull-visual-analysis)
Close looking is the method that distinguishes art history. An Art Bulletin article must make the
reader see the work and then show how what is seen carries meaning. Every visual claim must be
checkable against a numbered figure the reader can hold in view — which is why this skill is
inseparable from artbull-images-and-permissions.
When to trigger
- Writing the close-analysis passages that anchor the argument
- Moving from formal description to interpretation (form → meaning)
- Deciding which works, details, and comparanda must be reproduced as figures
- A reviewer said the looking is "thin," "impressionistic," or "not supported by the image"
Doing the looking
- Describe precisely, then interpret. Composition, line, color, light, space, scale, format, medium, and facture (handling, surface, marks of making) — then say what the description means for the argument. Description without interpretation is a caption; interpretation without description is assertion.
- Tie every claim to a figure. "Figure 3 shows…"; if a detail carries weight, reproduce a detail crop so the reader can verify it. No visual claim without a visible warrant.
- Attend to the material object. Original scale, support, technique, condition, and later alteration matter — a reproduction flattens them, so name what the image cannot show.
- Use comparison deliberately. Comparanda should do argumentative work (attribution, influence, convention, difference), not decorate. Each comparison is a figure that earns its slot.
- Reconstruct viewing conditions. Original site, scale, light, ritual or social use, and beholder position often change the reading — make these explicit where they bear on meaning.
- Respect the limits of looking. Distinguish what the object shows from what documents or context
supply (see
artbull-evidence-and-sources); do not over-read style into intention.
Anti-patterns
- Adjective-piling ("powerful," "dynamic") that describes your reaction, not the work
- Visual claims with no figure, or claims a reader cannot see in the supplied image
- Treating a reproduction as the object — ignoring scale, surface, and condition
- Comparanda chosen for prestige rather than argumentative necessity
- Reading biography or intention directly off the brushwork without warrant
Close-looking quality grid for the discipline's core method
At the College Art Association's quarterly, the looking is the argument's engine, and every claim must be checkable against a numbered plate.
| Looking element | Convincing | Thin (referee will flag) | The corrective |
|---|---|---|---|
| Description | Precise on composition, medium, facture, scale | Adjective-piling ("powerful," "dynamic") | Replace reactions with observable features |
| Figure warrant | Each claim tied to a figure or detail crop | A claim the supplied image cannot show | Reproduce the detail crop that makes it visible |
| Materiality | Scale, support, technique, condition noted | The reproduction treated as the object | Name what the plate flattens or cannot show |
Worked vignette: making facture carry an attribution
Suppose a passage claims a panel is autograph because the brushwork is "masterful and assured" — a reaction, not a description, that a referee here will call impressionistic. Rebuilt, the text describes the facture precisely (the wet-in-wet blending of the flesh, the single-stroke drapery contours) and ties each to Figure 4 and a detail crop (Figure 4a). Then it interprets: this handling matches the autograph group and differs from the workshop replicas. The passage names what the reproduction cannot convey — the panel's scale, the raking-light brush ridges — and brackets a later overpaint out of the claim. One comparison, a securely attributed head, earns its slot; an irrelevant masterpiece is cut.
Pushback patterns on the looking, and the venue-specific answer
- "The analysis is thin / impressionistic." Swap evaluative adjectives for observable features of composition, facture, and scale, then derive the meaning.
- "I cannot see your claim in the image." Supply the detail crop that makes the warrant visible; here a claim without a checkable figure is assertion.
Calibration anchor (hedge where uncertain)
- Detail crops are evidence, not extras: a load-bearing claim usually needs its own figure from the
limited, author-funded illustration program (
artbull-images-and-permissions), and technical imaging (infrared reflectography, raking light, X-radiography) can ground claims the eye cannot verify in a printed plate.
Output format
【Work + figure】what is reproduced, figure number
【Description】composition / medium / facture / scale (precise)
【Interpretation】what the looking means for the thesis
【Detail crops needed】which details must be reproduced to verify the claim
【Comparanda】each comparison + the work it does
【Next】artbull-evidence-and-sources
Supplementary resources
../../resources/external_tools.md— high-resolution image sources, IIIF deep-zoom, technical imaging../../resources/official-source-map.md— figure/caption conventions and the 20-illustration limit
Version History
- 1839142 Current 2026-07-05 14:29


