There Is a Digital Art History
Leonardo Impett, Fabian Offert

TL;DR
This paper examines how large-scale transformer-based vision models influence digital art history, highlighting their role in shaping visual canon and proposing a new critical methodology for analyzing their epistemic implications.
Contribution
It analyzes the epistemic and methodological impacts of large-scale vision models on digital art history, proposing a new entangled methodology for critical analysis.
Findings
Vision models encode Western visual canon influenced by internet culture.
Models facilitate automation of visual logics in art history.
A new methodology considers epistemic entanglement of models and datasets.
Abstract
In this paper, we revisit Johanna Drucker's question, "Is there a digital art history?" -- posed exactly a decade ago -- in the light of the emergence of large-scale, transformer-based vision models. While more traditional types of neural networks have long been part of digital art history, and digital humanities projects have recently begun to use transformer models, their epistemic implications and methodological affordances have not yet been systematically analyzed. We focus our analysis on two main aspects that, together, seem to suggest a coming paradigm shift towards a "digital" art history in Drucker's sense. On the one hand, the visual-cultural repertoire newly encoded in large-scale vision models has an outsized effect on digital art history. The inclusion of significant numbers of non-photographic images allows for the extraction and automation of different forms of visual…
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