|
|
Showing 1 - 13 of
13 matches in All Departments
The Viennese cafe was a key site of urban modernity around 1900. In
the rapidly growing city it functioned simultaneously as home and
workplace, affording opportunities for both leisure and
intellectual exchange. This volume explores the nature and function
of the coffeehouse in the social, cultural, and political world of
fin-de-siecle Vienna. Just as the cafe served as a creative meeting
place within the city, so this volume initiates conversations
between different disciplines focusing on Vienna at the beginning
of the twentieth century. Contributions are drawn from the fields
of social and cultural history, literary studies, Jewish studies
and art, and architectural and design history. A fresh perspective
is also provided by a selection of comparative articles exploring
coffeehouse culture elsewhere in Eastern Europe.
The Viennese cafe was a key site of urban modernity around 1900. In
the rapidly growing city it functioned simultaneously as home and
workplace, affording opportunities for both leisure and
intellectual exchange. This volume explores the nature and function
of the coffeehouse in the social, cultural, and political world of
fin-de-siecle Vienna. Just as the cafe served as a creative meeting
place within the city, so this volume initiates conversations
between different disciplines focusing on Vienna at the beginning
of the twentieth century. Contributions are drawn from the fields
of social and cultural history, literary studies, Jewish studies
and art, and architectural and design history. A fresh perspective
is also provided by a selection of comparative articles exploring
coffeehouse culture elsewhere in Eastern Europe.
Varied and deliberately diverse, this group of essays provides a
reassessment of the life and work of the popular nineteenth-century
artist Samuel Palmer. While scholarly publications have been
published recently which reassess Palmer's achievement, those works
primarily consider the artist in isolation. This volume examines
his work in relation to a wider art world and analyses areas of his
life and output that have until now received little attention,
reinstating the study of Palmer's work within broader debates about
landscape and cultural history. In Samuel Palmer Revisited, the
contributors provide a fresh perspective on Palmer's work, its
context and its influence.
'Eye hEar The Visual in Music' employs the concept of the visual in
proximate relation to music, producing a tension: 'is it not the
case that there is a gulf between painting and music, between the
visible and the audible? One is full of colour and light yet
silent; one is invisible and marvellously noisy.' Such a belief,
this book argues, betrays an ideological constraint on music,
desiccating it to sound, and art to vision. The starting point of
this study is more hybrid (and hydrating): that music is never
employed without numerous and complex intersections with the
visual. By involving the concept of synaesthesia, the book evokes
music's multi-sensory nature, stops it from sounding alone, and
offers music as a subject for art historians. Music bleeds into art
and visuality, in its graphic depiction in notation, in the theatre
of performance, its sights and sites. This book looks at music in
its absolute guise as a model for art; at notation and the
conductor as the silent visual fulcra around which music
circulates; at the music and image of Erik Satie; at the concert
hall as white cube; at the symphonic film '2001: A Space Odyssey';
and at the liminality of John Cage and Andy Warhol.
Varied and deliberately diverse, this group of essays provides a
reassessment of the life and work of the popular nineteenth-century
artist Samuel Palmer. While scholarly publications have been
published recently which reassess Palmer's achievement, those works
primarily consider the artist in isolation. This volume examines
his work in relation to a wider art world and analyses areas of his
life and output that have until now received little attention,
reinstating the study of Palmer's work within broader debates about
landscape and cultural history. In Samuel Palmer Revisited, the
contributors provide a fresh perspective on Palmer's work, its
context and its influence.
Central to the development of abstract art, in the early decades of
the 20th century was the conception (most famously articulated by
Walter Pater) that the most appropriate paradigm for non-figurative
art was music. The assumption has always been that this model was
most effectively understood as Western art music (classical music).
However, the musical form that was abstract art’s true twin is
jazz, a music that originated with African Americans, but which had
a profound impact on European artistic sensibilities. Both art
forms share creative techniques of rhythm, groove, gesture and
improvisation. This book sets out to theorize affinities and
connections between, and across, two seemingly diverse cultural
phenomena.
This provocative book explores the cross-fertilization between
music and the visual arts in the late nineteenth and twentieth
centuries. Reassessing the work of a wide range of composers and
artists including Richard Wagner, Pablo Picasso, Paul Klee, and
John Cage, Simon Shaw-Miller demonstrates how the boundaries
between art and music were permeable at this time, enabling each to
enrich the other.
|
You may like...
Mermaid Fillet
Mia Arderne
Paperback
(2)
R320
R286
Discovery Miles 2 860
|