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Wölfflin

Ludwig Heinrich von Wölfflin (1864–1945) was a Swiss art historian whose systematic approach to visual form helped establish formal analysis as a central method in art history. He is best known for Principles of Art History (Grundsätze der Kunstgeschichte), published in German in 1915. In this work he proposed a set of five opposing categories to compare styles across periods, notably Renaissance and Baroque, to reveal how artists used line, plane, form, light and shadow, and spatial organization to shape perception and meaning.

Wölfflin's method treats style as a history of perceptual choices rather than a catalog of individual works.

His work contributed to the professionalization of art history, promoting careful, systematic description and comparison. Wölfflin's

He
argued
that
shifts
in
technique—from
linear
to
painterly
handling,
from
closed,
self-contained
forms
to
more
open
and
dynamic
compositions,
and
from
flatter
to
more
spatially
organized
planes—reflect
broader
cultural
changes.
Although
his
terminology
reflects
early
20th-century
debates,
his
emphasis
on
formal
properties
influenced
subsequent
theories
of
style
and
the
development
of
modern
art
history.
concepts
remain
a
foundational
reference
in
introductory
curricula
and
continue
to
prompt
discussion
about
the
relationship
between
form,
perception,
and
meaning
in
art.