Nineteenth-Century Theories of Art

Nineteenth-Century Theories of Art

Author: Joshua C. Taylor

Publisher: Univ of California Press

Published: 1987

Total Pages: 580

ISBN-13: 9780520048881

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This unique and extraordinarily rich collection of writings offers a thematic approach to understanding the various theories of art that illumined the direction of nineteenth-century artists as diverse as Tommaso Minardi and Georges Seurat. It is significant that during the nineteenth century most artists felt compelled to found their artistic practice on a consciously established premise.


Whistler

Whistler

Author: Daniel E. Sutherland

Publisher: Yale University Press

Published: 2014-03-04

Total Pages: 452

ISBN-13: 0300203462

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A biography of James McNeill Whistler (1834-1903) that dispels the popular notion of Whistler as merely a combative, eccentric and unrelenting publicity seeker, a man as renowned for his public feuds with Oscar Wilde and John Ruskin as for the iconic portrait of his mother.


I Can Resist Everything Except Temptation

I Can Resist Everything Except Temptation

Author: Oscar Wilde

Publisher: Columbia University Press

Published: 1996

Total Pages: 232

ISBN-13: 9780231104562

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More than 1,000 quotations from Wilde on subjects from absinthe to Zola as well as selections from personal letters filled with poignant remarks on his life and the human condition.


After the Pre-Raphaelites

After the Pre-Raphaelites

Author: Elizabeth Prettejohn

Publisher: Manchester University Press

Published: 1999

Total Pages: 292

ISBN-13: 9780719054068

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What happened in Victorian painting and sculpture after the pre-Raphaelites? Aestheticism has been called the next avant-garde movement but attention has centred on literary figures such as Algernon Charles Swinburn, Walter Peter and Oscar Wilde. This volume overviews parallel trends in the visual arts, including the work of Dante Gabriel Rossetti, James McNeil Whistler, Edward Burne-Jones, Simeon Solomon and Albert Moore among others.


"Visions of the Industrial Age, 1830?914 "

Author: Amy Woodson-Boulton

Publisher: Routledge

Published: 2017-07-05

Total Pages: 398

ISBN-13: 135153758X

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Providing a comprehensive interdisciplinary assessment, and with a particular focus on expressions of tension and anxiety about modernity, this collection examines visual culture in nineteenth-century Europe as it attempted to redefine itself in the face of social change and new technologies. Contributing scholars from the fields of history, art, literature and the history of science investigate the role of visual representation and the dominance of the image by looking at changing ideas expressed in representations of science, technology, politics, and culture in advertising, art, periodicals, and novels. They investigate how, during the period, new emphasis was placed on the visual with emerging forms of mass communication?photography, lithography, newspapers, advertising, and cinema?while older forms as varied as poetry, the novel, painting, interior decoration, and architecture became transformed. The volume includes investigations into new innovations and scientific development such as the steam engine, transportation and engineering, the microscope, "spirit photography," and the orrery, as well as how this new technology is reproduced in illustrated periodicals. The essays also look at more traditional forms of creative expression to show that the same concerns and anxieties about science, technology and the changing perceptions of the natural world can be seen in the art of Armand Guillaumin, Auguste Rodin, Gustave Caillebotte, and Camille Pissarro, in colonial nineteenth-century novels, in design manuals, in museums, and in the decorations of domestic interior spaces. Visions of the Industrial Age, 1830-1914 offers a thorough exploration of both the nature of modernity, and the nature of the visual.