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The story of an innovative designer and farsighted art entrepreneur
and the important role he played in the dissemination of
19th-century Aestheticism This book follows the phenomenal rise of
Daniel Cottier (1838-1891) from an apprentice coach painter in
Glasgow to the founder of Cottier & Co., a fine and decorative
arts business with branches in London, New York, Sydney and
Melbourne. This gifted designer and brilliant art entrepreneur
keenly spotted one of the key aspects of late nineteenth-century
bourgeois culture - its focus on family, home and church - and
seized the artistic and commercial opportunities of the building
and decorating boom that it brought about. Cottier was a proponent
of the Aesthetic movement, an international trend in the history of
culture, art and design from the mid-1860s to the late 1890s: he
understood the era's desire for beauty and realised the economic
possibilities of its commoditisation. Beyond biography, therefore,
this book illuminates a significant event of late
nineteenth-century cultural history - Aestheticism's cult of beauty
meeting with the bourgeoisie's financial ability to possess it.
Distributed for the Paul Mellon Centre for Studies in British Art
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