Nicos Hadjinicolaou

Greek art historian of Marxist-methodology and historian of visual ideology; El Greco scholar and Professor, El Greco Centre, Institute of Mediterranean Studies, Rethymnon, Crete

Nicos Hadjinicolaou (b. 1938) is a Greek art historian of Marxist-methodology and historian of visual ideology, known from his 1978 book Art History and Class Struggle, a translation of his 1973 thesis La lutte des classes en France dans la production d'images de l'année 1830.

Quotes

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Art History And Class Struggle (1978)

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  • Any scientific treatment of the history of art must encompass not only the concepts of ‘social class’ and ‘class struggle, but also all the terms which describe particular social groups such as social category, autonomous fraction of a class, fraction of a class, and social stratum.
  • It should now be clear that ideology – the ideological level – is an organic part of every society. Human societies need these systems of ideas and beliefs in order to survive, and they secrete ideology as if it were an essential nourishment for their being and for their historical continuance.
  • It follows that if the function of ideology in general is to conceal contradictions, then the function of the dominant ideology, the ideology of the ruling classes, is a fortiori the same. This is bound to have serious consequences for all historical disciplines which are concerned with the various forms of ideology, including art history.
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