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Lives of Blake (Paperback)
Henry Crabb Robinson, John Thomas Smith, Alexander Gilchrist; Edited by Martin Myrone
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R297
R253
Discovery Miles 2 530
Save R44 (15%)
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Ships in 12 - 17 working days
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William Blake (1757-1827), hailed as 'the glorious luminary' by
William Rossetti, is one of the great mystics in the history of
Western art. His hallucinatory paintings, watercolours and, in
particular, the illustrations he made for his books of poetry are
instantly recognisable, and have inspired generations of artists in
his wake. Although he was largely ignored by his contemporaries, or
de rided as mad, a number of perceptive critics and commentators
took great interest in both the man and his work. This volume
brings together some of the most illuminating writings by people
who knew Blake, and brings this astonishing visionary to life. They
include the frank appraisal by the hugely percep tive diarist Crabb
Robinson, never before published in full in English, and the first
full biography by Blake's friend and fellow artist John Thomas
Smith, as well as Alexander Gilchrist's Preliminary, whihc heralded
the arrival of Blake in the 19th Century.
This multigenerational memoir sketches the lives of three
generations of the author's family that were involved with some of
the most profound issues of the twentieth century. Smith's paternal
grandfather was present at the creation of General Motors
Corporation and served as its Vice President and General Counsel.
His maternal grandfather, William G. Maguire, was an entrepreneur
and natural gas pipeline pioneer with a visionary grasp of natural
gas's significance in the twentieth century American economy.
Smith's father served as a senior diplomat under five presidents,
working to constrain the nuclear arms race between the United
States and Russia and to curtail proliferation of nuclear weapons.
Having devised an artificial cement in 1817, Louis-Joseph Vicat
(1786 1861) sought to share and further the science surrounding
calcareous cements. His son, Joseph Vicat, went on to found the
eponymous company which became an international manufacturer of
cement. This work was first published in French in 1828 and is
reissued here in the English translation of 1837. Vicat addresses
the subject of limes, the ingredients used to prepare mortars and
cements, and how these building materials are affected by
environmental conditions, such as immersion in water or exposure to
damp soil and inclement weather. He also compares binding products
of the time with those developed by the ancient Egyptians, Romans
and Greeks. The translator, J. T. Smith, provides helpful
explanatory notes and clarifies technical terms. Charles William
Pasley's Observations on Limes, Calcareous Cements, Mortars,
Stuccos, and Concrete (1838) is also reissued in this series."
The sculptor Joseph Nollekens (1737-1823) was famed for his
portrait busts of leading figures of his day. While working in
Italy in the 1760s, he established contacts among a group of
aristocratic British patrons, going on to become London's most
fashionable sculptor upon his return to England in 1771. The
draughtsman and antiquary John Thomas Smith (1766-1833) had been at
one time a pupil of Nollekens. It is believed that this anecdotal
two-volume biography, first published in 1828, was written as an
act of revenge. Having been promised a considerable legacy in the
sculptor's will, Smith was disappointed to receive only an
executor's fee. The work contains little analysis concerning the
sculptor's art, relating instead much gossip and anecdotes of a
personal nature. Nonetheless, it presents a vivid picture of the
London art world at that time. Volume 1 concentrates on aspects of
Nollekens' character, habits and opinions.
The sculptor Joseph Nollekens (1737-1823) was famed for his
portrait busts of leading figures of his day. While working in
Italy in the 1760s, he established contacts among a group of
aristocratic British patrons, going on to become London's most
fashionable sculptor upon his return to England in 1771. The
draughtsman and antiquary John Thomas Smith (1766-1833) had been at
one time a pupil of Nollekens. It is believed that this anecdotal
two-volume biography, first published in 1828, was written as an
act of revenge. Having been promised a considerable legacy in the
sculptor's will, Smith was disappointed to receive only an
executor's fee. The work contains little analysis concerning the
sculptor's art, relating instead much gossip and anecdotes of a
personal nature. Nonetheless, it presents a vivid picture of the
London art world at that time. Volume 2 covers the infamous will
and provides biographical sketches of Nollekens' contemporaries.
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