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Books > Arts & Architecture > History of art / art & design styles > 1600 to 1800 > Classicism
From the US Capitol to the Lincoln Memorial and the 9/11 Memorial
Museum, classical forms and ideas have been central to an American
nationalist aesthetic. Beginning with an understanding of this
centrality of the classical tradition to the construction of
American national identity and the projection of American power,
Empire of Ruin describes a mode of black classicism that has been
integral to the larger critique of American politics, aesthetics,
and historiography that African American cultural production has
more generally advanced. While the classical tradition has provided
a repository of ideas and images that have allowed white American
elites to conceive of the nation as an ideal Republic and the
vanguard of the idea of civilization, African American writers,
artists, and activists have characterized this dominant mode of
classical appropriation as emblematic of a national commitment to
an economy of enslavement and a geopolitical project of empire. If
the dominant forms of American classicism and monumental culture
have asserted the ascendancy of what Thomas Jefferson called an
"empire for liberty," for African American writers and artists it
has suggested that the nation is nothing exceptional, but rather
another iteration of what the radical abolitionist Henry Highland
Garnet identified as an "empire of slavery," inexorably devolving
into an "empire of ruin."
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Bone Deep
(Hardcover)
Jan Levine Thal
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R746
R661
Discovery Miles 6 610
Save R85 (11%)
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Ships in 18 - 22 working days
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This is a comparative study of the national significance of the
classical revival which marked English and French art during the
second half of the nineteenth century. It argues that the main
focus of artists' interest in classical Greece, was the body of the
Greek athlete. It explains this interest, first, by artists'
contact with the art of Pheidias and Polycletus which portrayed it;
and second, by the claim, made by physical anthropologists, that
the classical body typified the race of the European nations.
By the Roman age the traditional stories of Greek myth had long
since ceased to reflect popular culture. Mythology had become
instead a central element in elite culture. If one did not know the
stories one would not understand most of the allusions in the poets
and orators, classics and contemporaries alike; nor would one be
able to identify the scenes represented on the mosaic floors and
wall paintings in your cultivated friends' houses, or on the
silverware on their tables at dinner.
Mythology was no longer imbibed in the nursery; nor could it be
simply picked up from the often oblique allusions in the classics.
It had to be learned in school, as illustrated by the extraordinary
amount of elementary mythological information in the many surviving
ancient commentaries on the classics, notably Servius, who offers a
mythical story for almost every person, place, and even plant
Vergil mentions. Commentators used the classics as pegs on which to
hang stories they thought their students should know.
A surprisingly large number of mythographic treatises survive from
the early empire, and many papyrus fragments from lost works prove
that they were in common use. In addition, author Alan Cameron
identifies a hitherto unrecognized type of aid to the reading of
Greek and Latin classical and classicizing texts--what might be
called mythographic companions to learned poets such as Aratus,
Callimachus, Vergil, and Ovid, complete with source references.
Much of this book is devoted to an analysis of the importance
evidently attached to citing classical sources for mythical
stories, the clearest proof that they were now a part of learned
culture. So central were these source references that the more
unscrupulous faked them, sometimes on the grand scale.
The First World War mangled faces, blew away limbs, and ruined
nerves. Ten million dead, twenty million severe casualties, and
eight million people with permanent disabilities--modern war
inflicted pain and suffering with unsparing, mechanical efficiency.
However, such horror was not the entire story. People also rebuilt
their lives, their communities, and their bodies. From the ashes of
war rose beauty, eroticism, and the promise of utopia.
Ana Carden-Coyne investigates the cultures of resilience and the
institutions of reconstruction in Britain, Australia, and the
United States. Immersed in efforts to heal the consequences of
violence and triumph over adversity, reconstruction inspired
politicians, professionals, and individuals to transform themselves
and their societies.
Bodies were not to remain locked away as tortured memories.
Instead, they became the subjects of outspoken debate, the objects
of rehabilitation, and commodities of desire in global industries.
Governments, physicians, beauty and body therapists, monument
designers and visual artists looked to classicism and modernism as
the tools for rebuilding civilization and its citizens. What better
response to loss of life, limb, and mind than a body reconstructed?
Extensively illustrated, this is the first accessible publication
on the history of tapestry in over two decades. Woven with dazzling
images from history, mythology and the natural world, and
breath-taking in their craftsmanship, tapestries were among the
most valuable and high-status works of art available in Europe from
the medieval period to the end of the eighteenth century. Over 600
historic examples hang in National Trust properties in England and
Wales - the largest collection in the UK. This beautifully
illustrated study by tapestry expert Helen Wyld, in association
with the National Trust, offers new insights into these works, from
the complex themes embedded in their imagery, to long-forgotten
practices of sacred significance and ritual use. The range of
historical, mythological and pastoral themes that recur across the
centuries is explored, while the importance of the 'revival' of
tapestry from the late nineteenth century is considered in detail
for the first time. Although focussed on the National Trust's
collection, this book offers a fresh perspective on the history of
tapestry across Europe. Both the tapestry specialist and the keen
art-history enthusiast can find a wealth of information here about
woven wall hangings and furnishings, including methods of
production, purchase and distribution, evolving techniques and
technologies, the changing trends of subject matter across time,
and how tapestries have been collected, used and displayed in
British country houses across the centuries.
Propaganda in Revolutionary Ukraine is a survey of domestic
government and party printed propaganda in revolutionary Ukraine.
It is the first account in English to study these materials using
an illustrative sample of printed texts and to assess their impact
based on secret police and agitator situation reports. The book
surveys texts published by the Central Rada, the Ukrainian State,
the Ukrainian National Republic, the Ukrainian Socialist
Revolutionary Party, the Ukrainian Social Democratic and Labour
Party, the Independentists, Ukrainian Communist Party (UCP),
Ukraine's Bolshevik Party (CPU), and anti-Bolshevik warlords. It
includes 46 reproductions and describes the infrastructure that
underlay the production and dissemination of printed text
propaganda. The author argues that in the war of words neither
Ukrainian failures nor Bolshevik success should be exaggerated.
Each side managed to sway opinion in its favour in specific places
at specific times.
'Arnold Hausers Social History of Art - a very important and under-appreciated text.' - Whitney Davis, John Evans Professor of Art History, Northwestern University
'It is no exaggeration to say that more than any other work Hauser's four volumes inspired my interest in art history.' - Alan Wallach, Ralph H Wark Professor of Art History, College of William and Mary
'This work has great value in a contemporary context. I look forward to seeing what Jonathan has done with the introduction, but I cannot think of anyone better suited to the task.' - Johanna Drucker, Professor of Art History, Yale University
Hausers extraordinary energy and subtlety wave a brilliant synthesis of the interaction between the aesthetic and societal, giving us at one and the same time a wealth of artistic detail and a consistent and fully elaborated exposition of the social process. - Albert Boime, UCLA, author of The Social History of Modern Art, 1750-1989
The fin de siecle not only designated the end of the Victorian
epoch but also marked a significant turn toward modernism.
Extraordinary Aesthetes critically examines literary and visual
artists from England, Ireland, and Scotland whose careers in
poetry, fiction, and illustration flourished during the concluding
years of the nineteenth century. This collection draws special
attention to the exceptional contributions that artists, poets, and
novelists made to the cultural world of the late 1880s and 1890s.
The essays illuminate a range of established, increasingly
acknowledged, and lesser-known figures whose contributions to this
brief but remarkably intense cultural period warrant close
attention. Such figures include the critically neglected Mabel
Dearmer, whose stunning illustrations appear in Evelyn Sharp's
radical fairy tales for children. Equally noteworthy is the
uncompromising short fiction of Ella D'Arcy, who played a pivotal
role in editing the most famous journal of the 1890s, the Yellow
Book. The discussion extends to a range of legendary writers,
including Max Beerbohm, Oscar Wilde, and W.B. Yeats, whose works
are placed in dialogue with authors who gained prominence during
this period. Bringing women's writing to the fore, Extraordinary
Aesthetes rebalances the achievements of artists and writers during
the rapidly transforming cultural world of the fin de siecle.
Crowning Glories integrates Louis XIV's propaganda campaigns, the
transmission of Northern art into France, and the rise of
empiricism in the eighteenth century - three historical touchstones
- to examine what it would have meant for France's elite to
experience the arts in France simultaneously with Netherlandish
realist painting. In an expansive study of cultural life under the
Sun King, Harriet Stone considers the monarchy's elaborate palace
decors, the court's official records, and the classical theatre
alongside Northern images of daily life in private homes, urban
markets, and country fields. Stone argues that Netherlandish art
assumes an unobtrusive yet, for the history of ideas, surprisingly
dramatic role within the flourishing of the arts, both visual and
textual, in France during Louis XIV's reign. Netherlandish realist
art represented thinking about knowledge that challenged the
monarchy's hold on the French imagination, and its efforts to
impose the king's portrait as an ideal and proof of his authority.
As objects appreciated for their aesthetic and market value,
Northern realist paintings assumed an uncontroversial place in
French royal and elite collections. Flemish and Dutch still lifes,
genre paintings, and cityscapes, however, were not merely
accoutrements of power, acquisitions made by those with influence
and money. Crowning Glories reveals how the empirical orientation
of Netherlandish realism exposed French court society to a
radically different mode of thought, one that would gain full
expression in the Encyclopedie of Diderot and d'Alembert.
In December 1820, at twenty-one years old, Edward Geoffrey Stanley,
the future 14th earl of Derby and three-times prime minister, began
an extensive tour of continental Europe. By the time of his return
to England twenty months later, he had visited many of the foremost
centres for art and culture in Europe, and mostly in Italy. In his
travel diaries he recorded his intensive social life, his visits to
historical sites, his viewings of art collections, his comments on
architecture, his admiration of landscapes and his impressions of
foreign societies. He was energetic, enthusiastic and discerning:
the bridge of Augustus in Umbria gave him 'a stupendous idea of
Roman grandeur'; the charm of the towns crowning the Tuscan hills
struck him with the same delight that he felt when gazing at one of
Poussin's paintings; the waterfall at Terni, which dropped 370 feet
into an abyss of spray, was 'awfully magnificent'; while the
ceremonies of the Italian Catholic Church he judged to be a blend
of mummery, superstition and bigotry. Sights and experiences like
these influenced him for the rest of his life. This precious
collection of diaries, found only recently and published here for
the first time, reveal Edward Stanley to have been a young man of
diligence, courage and decisiveness: a future leader with a
conspicuous and burgeoning sense of political and social justice.
It was these characteristics, seen in early development within
these pages, that shaped the man and the extraordinary career to
come.
The Living Death of Antiquity examines the idealization of an
antiquity that exhibits, in the words of Johann Joachim
Winckelmann, 'a noble simplicity and quiet grandeur'. Fitzgerald
discusses the aesthetics of this strain of neoclassicism as
manifested in a range of work in different media and periods,
focusing on the late eighteenth and early nineteenth centuries. In
the aftermath of Winckelmann's writing, John Flaxman's engraved
scenes from the Iliad and the sculptors Antonio Canova and Bertel
Thorvaldsen reinterpreted ancient prototypes or invented new ones.
Earlier and later versions of this aesthetic in the ancient Greek
Anacreontea, the French Parnassian poets and Erik Satie's Socrate,
manifest its character in different media and periods. Looking with
a sympathetic eye on the original aspirations of the neoclassical
aesthetic and its forward-looking potential, Fitzgerald describes
how it can tip over into the vacancy or kitsch through which a
'remaindered' antiquity lingers in our minds and environments. This
book asks how the neoclassical value of simplicity serves to
conjure up an epiphanic antiquity, and how whiteness, in both its
literal and its metaphorical forms, acts as the 'logo' of
neoclassical antiquity, and functions aesthetically in a variety of
media. In the context of the waning of a neoclassically idealized
antiquity, Fitzgerald describes the new contents produced by its
asymptotic approach to meaninglessness, and how the antiquity that
it imagined both is and is not with us.
Why does tragedy give pleasure? Why do people who are neither wicked nor depraved enjoy watching plays about suffering and death? Is it because we see horrific matter controlled by majestic art? Or because tragedy actually reaches out to the dark side of human nature? A. D. Nuttall's wide-ranging, lively, and engaging book offers a new answer to this perennial question. Writers discussed include Aristotle, Shakespeare, Nietzsche, and Freud.
"Art is not what you see, but what you make others see." Edgar
Degas Covering every era and over 650 artists, this comprehensive,
illustrated guide offers an accessible yet expansive view of art
history, featuring everything from iconic works and lesser-known
gems to techniques and themes. Offering a comprehensive overview of
Western artists, themes, paintings, techniques, and stories, Art: A
Visual History is packed full of large, full-colour images of
iconic works and lesser-known gems. Exploring every era, from
30,000BCE to the present, it includes features on the major schools
and movements, as well as close-up critical appraisals of 22
masterpieces - from Botticelli's Primavera to J. M. W. Turner's The
Fighting Temeraire. With detailed referencing, crisp reproductions
and a fresh design, this beautiful book is a must-have for anyone
with an interest in art history - from first-time gallery goers to
knowledgeable art enthusiasts. What makes great art? Discover the
answer now, with Art: A Visual History.
Inspired by newly discovered antiquities of the ancient world
exhibited in the museums of Europe and celebrated in the
illustrated press of the day, the leading British history painters
Sir Lawrence Alma-Tadema, Sir Edward Poynter and Edwin Long created
a striking body of artworks in which archaeology was a prime focus.
Of the growing community of historicist and classicist painters in
mid-nineteenth century Britain, these artists expressed a passion
for archaeological detail, and their aesthetic engagement with
ancient material culture played a key role in fostering the
enthusiasm for antiquity with wider audiences. Painting Antiquity
explores the archaeological dimension of their paintings in detail,
addressing how the relationship these artists had with ancient
objects represented a distinctive and important development in the
cultural reception of the past. The book also considers the
inspiration for the movement defined as "archaeological genre
painting," the artistic and historic context for this new style,
the archaeological sources upon which the artworks were based, and
the critical reception of the paintings in the world of Victorian
art criticism. Alongside extensive visual evidence, rendered here
in both striking color and black-and-white imagery, Stephanie Moser
shows how this artistic practice influenced our understanding of
ancient Egypt. Further, she argues that these paintings affected
the development of archaeology as a discipline, revealing how the
painters had an intense engagement with archaeology, representing
artefacts in extraordinary detail and promoting the use of ancient
material culture according to an aesthetic agenda. The issues
raised by placing importance on concepts of beauty and decoration,
over values such as rarity, function, or historical use continue to
divide archaeologists and art historians in the present day.
Ultimately, by demonstrating how the artistic dialogue with
antiquity contributed to defining it, Painting Antiquity sheds
important new light on the two-way exchanges between visual
representations of the past and knowledge formation.
An original and breathtakingly beautiful perspective on how art
developed through the ages, this book reveals how new materials and
techniques inspired artists to create their greatest works. The
Story of Painting will completely transform your understanding and
enjoyment of art. Covering a comprehensive array of topics, from
the first pigments and frescos to linear perspective in Renaissance
paintings, the influence of photography, Impressionism, and the
birth of modern art, it follows each step in the evolution of
painting over the last 25,000 years, from the first cave paintings
to the abstract works of the last 100 years. Packed with lavish
colour reproductions of paintings and photographs of artists at
work and the materials they used, it delves into the key paintings
from each period to analyse the techniques and secrets of the great
masters in detail. Immerse yourself in the pages of this stunning
book and find yourself dazzled by new colours; marvel at the magic
of perspective; wonder at glowing depictions of fabric and flesh;
understand cubism; and embrace abstraction. You will look at
paintings in a whole new light.
Universally regarded as the father of French painting, Nicolas
Poussin is arguably the greatest of all painters of that school.
Yet Poussin's reputation has been founded more on the intellectual
and philosophical qualities of his art than its sheer visual
beauty. In Poussin as a Painter: From Classicism to Abstraction,
Richard Verdi redresses the balance, describing and analyzing
Poussin's outstanding gifts as a pictorial storyteller, designer
and colourist - in short, on the purely aesthetic (and often
abstract) aspects of his art that have inspired so many later
painters, from Cezanne to Picasso. The book features more than 220
fine illustrations, the majority in colour, and encompasses all
aspects of Poussin's art from the mid 1620s to his death in 1665.
This ground-breaking study gives new insight into Poussin, and is
essential reading for all who admire this seminal French painter.
The rediscovery of Pompeii and Herculaneum in the eighteenth
century challenged European assumptions about ancient life; just as
influential, if quieter, was the revolution caused by translations
of Greek tragedy. Art of the mid-eighteenth to early nineteenth
centuries dealt with the violence and seeming irrationality of
tragic action as an account of the rituals and beliefs of a foreign
culture, worshipping strange gods and enacting unfamiliar customs.
The result was a focus on the radical difference of the past which,
however, was thought to still have something to teach us: not how
to live better, but that we live differently and should allow
others to do so as well. In recognizing tragedy as an alien
cultural form, modern Europe recognized its own historical status
as one culture among many. Naturally, this insight was resisted.
Greek tragedy was seldom performed. In painting, it lived a shadow
existence alongside more didactic subject matter, emerging
explicitly only in a corpus of wash drawings by Anglo-Swiss artist
Henry Fuseli (1741-1825), and an international circle of artists
active in Rome in the 1770s. In this volume, Pop examines Fuseli as
exemplary of a pluralist classicism, paying especial attention to
his experiments with moral and aesthetic conventions in the more
private medium of drawing. He analyses this broad view of culture
through the lens of Fuseli's life and work; his remarkable
acquaintances Emma Hamilton, Erasmus Darwin, and Mary
Wollstonecraft, and the great theorists of art and morals to whom
he responded, Jean-Jacques Rousseau, Johann Joachim Winckelmann,
and David Hume, play prominent roles in this investigation of how
antiquity became modern.
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Bone Deep
(Paperback)
Jan Levine Thal
|
R410
R384
Discovery Miles 3 840
Save R26 (6%)
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Ships in 18 - 22 working days
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Domesticating Empire is the first contextually-oriented monograph
on Egyptian imagery in Roman households. Caitlin Barrett draws on
case studies from Flavian Pompeii to investigate the close
association between representations of Egypt and a particular type
of Roman household space: the domestic garden. Through paintings
and mosaics portraying the Nile, canals that turned the garden
itself into a miniature "Nilescape," and statuary depicting
Egyptian themes, many gardens in Pompeii offered ancient visitors
evocations of a Roman vision of Egypt. Simultaneously faraway and
familiar, these imagined landscapes made the unfathomable breadth
of empire compatible with the familiarity of home. In contrast to
older interpretations that connect Roman "Aegyptiaca" to the
worship of Egyptian gods or the problematic concept of
"Egyptomania," a contextual analysis of these garden assemblages
suggests new possibilities for meaning. In Pompeian houses,
Egyptian and Egyptian-looking objects and images interacted with
their settings to construct complex entanglements of "foreign" and
"familiar," "self" and "other." Representations of Egyptian
landscapes in domestic gardens enabled individuals to present
themselves as sophisticated citizens of empire. Yet at the same
time, household material culture also exerted an agency of its own:
domesticizing, familiarizing, and "Romanizing" once-foreign images
and objects. That which was once imagined as alien and potentially
dangerous was now part of the domus itself, increasingly
incorporated into cultural constructions of what it meant to be
"Roman." Featuring brilliant illustrations in both color and black
and white, Domesticating Empire reveals the importance of material
culture in transforming household space into a microcosm of empire.
In this beautifully illustrated overview, Renee Worringer provides
a clear and comprehensive account of the longevity, pragmatism, and
flexibility of the Ottoman Empire in governing over vast
territories and diverse peoples. A Short History of the Ottoman
Empire uses clear headings, themes, text boxes, primary source
translations, and maps to assist students in understanding the
Empire's complex history.
The desire for things which are inspired by, imitate, or indeed are
Greek, or Greco-Roman has been felt throughout history. The twenty
contributions in this volume explore the presence and diffusion of
what they term 'The Classical Taste' from the 5th century BC to the
20th century focusing on the methods and media through which this
occurs. Including discussions on vase painting, ancient gems, the
image of Alexander the Great, Roman medallions, cameos, statuettes
and portraits, and the reception of Classicism in the medieval,
Renaissance and modern periods.
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