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This book explores the significance of the now-lost pavilion built
in the Buckingham Palace Gardens in the time of Queen Victoria for
understanding experiments in British art and architecture at the
outset of the Victorian era. It introduces the curious history of
the garden pavilion, its experimental contents, the controversies
of its critical reception, and how it has been digitally
remediated. The chapters discuss how the pavilion, decorated with
frescos and encaustics by some of the most prominent painters of
the mid-nineteenth century, became the center of a national
conversation about an identity for British art, the capacity of its
artists, and the quality of Royal and public taste. Beyond an
examination of the pavilion's history, this book also introduces a
digital model which restores the pavilion to virtual life,
underscoring the importance of the pavilion for Victorian
aesthetics and culture.
This book explores the significance of the now-lost pavilion built
in the Buckingham Palace Gardens in the time of Queen Victoria for
understanding experiments in British art and architecture at the
outset of the Victorian era. It introduces the curious history of
the garden pavilion, its experimental contents, the controversies
of its critical reception, and how it has been digitally
remediated. The chapters discuss how the pavilion, decorated with
frescos and encaustics by some of the most prominent painters of
the mid-nineteenth century, became the center of a national
conversation about an identity for British art, the capacity of its
artists, and the quality of Royal and public taste. Beyond an
examination of the pavilion's history, this book also introduces a
digital model which restores the pavilion to virtual life,
underscoring the importance of the pavilion for Victorian
aesthetics and culture.
This "Companion" brings together specially commissioned essays by
distinguished international scholars that reflect both the
diversity of Victorian poetry and the variety of critical
approaches that illuminate it.
Approaches Victorian poetry by way of genre, production and
cultural context, rather than through individual poets or poems
Demonstrates how a particular poet or poem emerges from a number of
overlapping cultural contexts.
Explores the relationships between work by different poets
Recalls attention to a considerable body of poetry that has fallen
into neglect
Essays are informed by recent developments in textual and cultural
theory
Considers Victorian women poets in every chapter
This collection of original essays offers a broad and varied
discussion of gender issues and treatments of sexuality in
Victorian poetry, fiction, and visual arts. Featuring a
representative selection of artists-poets, novelists, painters,
sculptors, playwrights, and dancers-these critical analyses explore
the ways in which women as artists, as subjects, and as icons
function either to challenge and revise or to reify their society's
gender ideologies. Enhanced by a diversity of approaches, the
collection introduces revisionist readings of well-known literary
works and examines interconnections between literature and the
visual arts. In the first two parts, which address Victorian poetry
and fiction, the readings illuminate previously unexplained
features of poems and novels by such writers as Alfred Tennyson,
Elizabeth Barrett Browning, Matthew Arnold, Christina Rossetti, A.
C. Swinburne, Gerard Manley Hopkins, Anne Bront\u00eb, Charles
Dickens, George Eliot, Rudyard Kipling, Thomas Hardy, Kate Chopin,
and Oscar Wilde. The third part of the collection focuses on the
themes of gender conventions and subversions that occur in visual
representations-paintings and cartoons, sculpture and architectural
reliefs, drama, opera, and music-hall dance. Rather than presenting
literature and art as self-contained, the collection advances the
assumption that creative works participate in a larger ideological
current of society. Thus, where relevant, the contributors
reference politics, economics, science, and other modes of cultural
discourse. Such an approach retrieves the historical contexts
surrounding the production and reception of the poetry, fiction,
and visual arts examined.
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