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Visual Culture
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 340

Visual Culture

  • Categories: Art
  • Type: Book
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  • Published: 2005
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  • Publisher: MIT Press

Drawing on interviews, responses to questionnaires, and oral histories by U.S.

Exploring Visual Literacy Inside, Outside and Through the Frame
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 235

Exploring Visual Literacy Inside, Outside and Through the Frame

  • Type: Book
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  • Published: 2020-09-25
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  • Publisher: BRILL

This interdisciplinary exploration of visual literacy is a result of the discussions that arose at the 2011 Conference on Visual Literacy in Oxford. Consistent with the themes which surfaced at the conference, this collection of articles examines our ways of framing what we see.

Art and the Academy in the Nineteenth Century
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 228

Art and the Academy in the Nineteenth Century

  • Categories: Art

Throughout the nineteenth century, academies functioned as the main venues for the teaching, promotion, and display of art. Contemporary scholars have, for the most part, denigrated academic art, calling it formulaic, unoriginal, and repetitious. The contributors to Art and the Academy in the Nineteenth Century challenge this entrenched notion and consider how academies worldwide have represented an important system of artistic preservation and transmission. Their essays eschew easy binaries that have reigned in academia for more than half a century and that simply oppose the avant-garde to academicism.

Ways Around Modernism
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 236

Ways Around Modernism

  • Categories: Art

First Published in 2007. Routledge is an imprint of Taylor & Francis, an informa company.

Theorizing Imitation in the Visual Arts
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 240

Theorizing Imitation in the Visual Arts

  • Categories: Art

The theory and practice of imitation has long been central to the construction of art and yet imitation is still frequently confused with copying. Theorizing Imitation in the Visual Arts challenges this prejudice by revealing the ubiquity of the practice across cultures and geographical borders. This fascinating collection of original essays has been compiled by a group of leading scholars Challenges the prejudice of imitation in art by bringing to bear a perspective that reveals the ubiquity of the practice of imitation across cultural and geographical borders Brings light to a broad range of areas, some of which have been little researched in the past

The Rise of the Cult of Rembrandt
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 392

The Rise of the Cult of Rembrandt

  • Categories: Art

Rembrandt's life and art had an almost mythic resonance in nineteenth-century France with artists, critics, and collectors alike using his artistic persona both as a benchmark and as justification for their own goals. This first in-depth study of the traditional critical reception of Rembrandt reveals the preoccupation with his perceived "authenticity," "naturalism," and "naiveté," demonstrating how the artist became an ancestral figure, a talisman with whom others aligned themselves to increase the value of their own work. And in a concluding chapter, the author looks at the playRembrandt, staged in Paris in 1898, whose production and advertising are a testament to the enduring power of the artist's myth.

The Deaths of Henri Regnault
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 313

The Deaths of Henri Regnault

  • Categories: Art

This is the first book in many years about the nineteenth-century French artist Henri Regnault. Controversial and celebrated in his day, Regnault did not live long. He died at the age of 28 in the Franco-Prussian War, becoming a hero of the French nation. What sets him apart from the more conventional members of the French academy is his great skill in painting Oriental exotic subjects and doing so in a highly materialistic vein designed to produce, through elements like gold paint, garish colors, and odd details, blatant amusement for the eye. In a word, his images are both delightful and awful. Gotlieb s book combines biography, history, and comparative readings of works by Regnault with those by other French artists such as Delacroix, Fromentin, and Renoir. It also, importantly, explores the afterlives of Regnault as a cultural and artistic figure, as well as his diminishment during the rise of modernism and his eventual demise in the history of art."

Imperial Illusions
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 388

Imperial Illusions

  • Categories: Art

In the Forbidden City and other palaces around Beijing, Emperor Qianlong (r. 1736-1795) surrounded himself with monumental paintings of architecture, gardens, people, and faraway places. The best artists of the imperial painting academy, including a number of European missionary painters, used Western perspectival illusionism to transform walls and ceilings with visually striking images that were also deeply meaningful to Qianlong. These unprecedented works not only offer new insights into late imperial China’s most influential emperor, but also reflect one way in which Chinese art integrated and domesticated foreign ideas. In Imperial Illusions, Kristina Kleutghen examines all known survi...

Mapping Degas
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 395

Mapping Degas

  • Categories: Art

The New Art History and the Impressionist canon seem to have successfully claimed Edgar Degas as a misogynist, rabid nationalist and misanthrope whose art was both masterly and experimental. By analysing Degas’s approach to space and his self-fashioning attitude towards identity within the ambiguities of the political and artistic culture of nineteenth-century France, this book questions the characterisation of Degas as a right-wing Frenchman and artist, and will change the way in which Degas is thought about today.

Annual Report
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 348

Annual Report

  • Type: Book
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  • Published: 1942
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  • Publisher: Unknown

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