"Baroque Garden Cultures: Emulation, Sublimation, Subversion"
proposes a new approach to the study of baroque gardens, examining
the social reception of gardens as a means to understand garden
culture in general and exploring baroque gardens as a feature of
baroque cultures in particular. In so doing, it negotiates a
turning point in garden history.
Jose Antonio Maravall determined that baroque culture grew out
of the social and economic crises of the seventeenth and eighteenth
centuries, precipitating the establishment of the state and its
concomitant engines of repression and propaganda. This absolutist
state deployed the arts as a political means to dazzle society into
submission to the monarch. The varying degrees of state control
allowed for diverse cultural and political reception of the arts to
emerge and for the possibility of anti-baroque arts to develop
alongside baroque ones. This possibility invites us to understand
the conditions of artistic production as a preamble to aesthetic
criticism and to position garden history within the framework of
social history. Such an approach explores and explains the vexing
differences in baroque art and landscape architecture in different
countries and at different times from the end of the sixteenth
century to the present. Although primarily associated with Europe,
baroque culture developed elsewhere as well.
Gardens played a prominent role in the development of the
European baroque, with variations due to the different political
systems and social structures in place between 1580 and 1770. These
countries nevertheless entertained a dense network of cultural
relationships and the reception of baroque gardens can thus be
studied in an international context.
This study of gardens ranging from western and northern Europe
in the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries to as far away as
twelfth-century China shows how the study of audience reception can
renew our understanding of hte cultural role of gardens. Gardens
have a life of their own and this book's various chapters ponder
how they might have been formative of culture in a way that
completely escaped the intentions of their creators and designers.
This volume also studies the changing reception of gardens long
after they were designed, including the reception of historical
gardens by contemporary tourists and art critics. "Baroque Garden
Cultures" demonstrates that while baroque garden politics
encouraged emulation and led to various forms of sublimation of its
attempts at cultural control, it could not ultimately escape clever
means of subversion.
General
Imprint: |
Dumbarton Oaks Research Library and Collection
|
Country of origin: |
United States |
Release date: |
June 2005 |
First published: |
February 2006 |
Authors: |
Michel Conan
|
Dimensions: |
264 x 187 x 29mm (L x W x T) |
Format: |
Hardcover
|
Pages: |
434 |
Edition: |
New |
ISBN-13: |
978-0-88402-304-3 |
Categories: |
Books >
Arts & Architecture >
Architecture >
General
Promotions
|
LSN: |
0-88402-304-4 |
Barcode: |
9780884023043 |
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