Practice of hanging paintings in inverted orientation
Most paintings are intended to be hung in a precise orientation, defining an upper part and a lower part.
Some paintings are displayed upside down, sometimes by mistake since the image does not represent an easily recognizable oriented subject and lacks a signature or by a deliberate decision of the exhibitor.
Pablo Picasso's 1912 drawing The Fiddler was upside down at the Reina Sofía Museum of Madrid. The representations of the head and the fiddle were confused.[8]
Georg Baselitz used a painting by Louis-Ferdinand von Rayski, Wermsdorf Woods, as a model, in order to paint his first picture with an inverted motif: The Wood On Its Head (1969).[10] By inverting his paintings, the artist is able to emphasize the organisation of colours and form and confront the viewer with the picture's surface rather than the personal content of the image. In this sense, the paintings are empty and not subject to interpretation. Instead, one can only look at them.[11]
Spolia (fragments of sculpture and architecture recycled in new buildings) may not be in the original orientation for ideological or pragmatical reasons. An example is the blocks in the shape of a Medusa head reused as column bases in the Basilica Cistern of Constantinople.
Pittura infamante, a genre depicting enemies hanging from their feet.
Aerial landscape art – Visual art depicting the appearance of a landscape as viewed from an aircraft or spacecraft
^Gohr, Siegfried. "Georg Baselitz. Kunst als Akt des Schaffens und Zerstörens. In: Detlef Bluemler". Künstler – Kritisches Lexikon der Gegenwartskunst. 18: 3ff.
^Calvocoressi, Richard (1985). "A Source for the Inverted Imagery in Georg Baselitz's Painting". The Burlington Magazine. 127 (993): 894–899. JSTOR882264.