Victorian & Edwardian Paintings in the Lady Lever Art Gallery

Victorian & Edwardian Paintings in the Lady Lever Art Gallery

Author: Lady Lever Art Gallery

Publisher: Stationery Office Books (TSO)

Published: 1994

Total Pages: 184

ISBN-13:

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These masterpieces from this superb collection will look familiar to many readers: several paintings were used as advertisements in the USA for Lever Brothers soap, as Lord William Hesketh Lever, one of the brothers, was the collector of these works.


Earlier British Paintings in the Lady Lever Art Gallery

Earlier British Paintings in the Lady Lever Art Gallery

Author: Alex Kidson

Publisher: Liverpool University Press

Published: 1999

Total Pages: 216

ISBN-13:

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A detailed catalogue of the paintings in the gallery by British artists born before 1810. This group of 151 paintings, collected by Lord Leverhulme between 1896 and 1925, represents one of the key areas of his taste, and includes masterpieces by Gainsborough, Reynolds, Wilson, Stubbs, Constable and Turner.


Printing and Painting the News in Victorian London

Printing and Painting the News in Victorian London

Author: Andrea Korda

Publisher: Routledge

Published: 2017-07-05

Total Pages: 369

ISBN-13: 1351553232

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Printing and Painting the News in Victorian London offers a fresh perspective on Social Realism by contextualizing it within the burgeoning new media environment of Victorian London. Paintings labelled as Social Realist by Luke Fildes, Frank Holl and Hubert Herkomer are frequently considered to typify the sentimental Victorian genre painting that quickly became outdated with the development of modernism. Yet this book argues that the paintings must be considered as the result of the new experiences of modernity-the urban poverty that the paintings represent and, most importantly, the advent of the mass-produced illustrated news. Fildes, Holl and Herkomer worked for The Graphic, a publication launched in 1869 as a rival to the dominant Illustrated London News. The artists? illustrations, which featured the growing problem of urban poverty, became the basis for large-scale paintings that provoked controversy among their contemporaries and later became known as Social Realism. This first in-depth study of The Graphic and Social Realism uses the approach of media archaeology to unearth the modernity of these works, showing that they engaged with the changing notions of objectivity and immediacy that nineteenth-century new media cultivated. In doing so, this book proposes an alternative trajectory for the development of modernism that allows for a richer understanding of nineteenth-century visual culture.


Edward Burne-Jones, Victorian Artist-dreamer

Edward Burne-Jones, Victorian Artist-dreamer

Author: Stephen Wildman

Publisher: Metropolitan Museum of Art

Published: 1998

Total Pages: 375

ISBN-13: 0870998587

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This publication is issued in conjunction with the 1998 exhibition of the same name held at The Metropolitan Museum of Art in New York and scheduled for venues in England and France. Burnes-Jones (1833-1898) created a style that had widespread influence on both British and European art--a narrative style derived from medieval legend and fused with the influence of Italian Renaissance masters, a style that ceded popularity to a growing taste for abstraction at the end of the 19th century. Now Burne-Jones's star has risen again, and this catalogue contains full discussion of his life and work and representation of his prodigious output of drawings and paintings. 9.5x12.5"Annotation copyrighted by Book News, Inc., Portland, OR


Narrative painting in nineteenth-century Europe

Narrative painting in nineteenth-century Europe

Author: Nina Lübbren

Publisher: Manchester University Press

Published: 2023-05-23

Total Pages: 324

ISBN-13: 1526168561

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This ground-breaking book presents a critical study of pictorial narrative in nineteenth-century European painting. Covering works from France, Germany, Britain, Italy and elsewhere, it traces the ways in which immensely popular artists like Jean-Léon Gérôme, Karl von Piloty and William Quiller Orchardson used unique visual strategies to tell thrilling and engaging stories. Regardless of genre, content or national context, these paintings share a fundamental modern narrative mode. Unlike traditional art, they do not rely on textual sources; nor do they tell stories through the human body alone. Instead, they experiment with objects, spaces, cause-and-effect relations and open-ended ambiguity, prompting viewers and reviewers to read for clues in order to weave their own elaborate tales.


The Holland Park Circle

The Holland Park Circle

Author: Caroline Dakers

Publisher: Yale University Press

Published: 1999-01-01

Total Pages: 328

ISBN-13: 9780300081640

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This book - the first major study of the Holland Park Circle of artists, architects, and their patrons - is both an engrossing narrative of their lives, works and influence and a perceptive analysis of the subtle relationships between high Victorian taste and mercantile values."--BOOK JACKET.


British and Irish Paintings in Public Collections

British and Irish Paintings in Public Collections

Author: Christopher Wright

Publisher: Yale University Press

Published: 2006-01-01

Total Pages: 950

ISBN-13: 9780300117301

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This book sets a new standard as a work of reference. It covers British and Irish art in public collections from the beginning of the sixteenth century to the end of the nineteenth, and it encompasses nearly 9,000 painters and 90,000 paintings in more than 1,700 separate collections. The book includes as well pictures that are now lost, some as a consequence of the Second World War and others because of de-accessioning, mostly from 1950 to about 1975 when Victorian art was out of fashion. By listing many tens of thousands of previously unpublished works, including around 13,000 which do not yet have any form of attribution, this book becomes a unique and indispensable work of reference, one that will transform the study of British and Irish painting.


Memory and Desire

Memory and Desire

Author: Kenneth McConkey

Publisher: Routledge

Published: 2017-07-12

Total Pages: 639

ISBN-13: 1351762834

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This title was first published in 2002. 'Memory and Desire' is a lavishly illustrated account of the art world in Britain at the turn of the twentieth century. It calls upon rich resources of contemporary diaries, letters and art criticism, as well as the analysis of works of art to answer questions about how and why new artistic tendencies emerged and tastes changed. Eschewing the familiar narrative of an inevitable progress towards modernism, Kenneth McConkey considers a broad range of art and critical thinking in the period. Discussing the market for old master paintings, which rivalled those for modern art, and the question of how and why certain genres of art were particularly successful at the time, McConkey explores the detail and significance of contemporary taste. He draws upon the work of commercially successful painters such as John Singer Sargent, William Orpen, George Clausen, Alfred East, John Lavery and Philip Wilson Steer, and their critic-supporters to throw light upon current arguments about training, aesthetics, visual memory and the creation of new art. 'Memory and Desire' is a major contribution to our knowledge of this important period in British art.