48 research outputs found

    Wet Paint: Visual Culture in a Changing Britain – A Round Table Debate

    Get PDF
    Political decisions and debates regarding the interregional and interna- tional partnerships that constitute Great Britain, including those over Scottish Independence, EVEL (English Votes for English Laws) and proposed legislation on an ‘in/out’ referendum on British membership of the European Union, have contributed to, and intensified, the examination of Britain’s institutions, as well as its national emblems and arche- types. In light of such a dynamic situation, Visual Culture in Britain has asked representatives of British universities, the museum sector and research centres to respond to the idea of a changing Britain through the prism of British art and visual culture, using cogent examples wherever possible, and to outline their observations, understandings and positions within this rapidly developing context

    Gothic visions of classical architecture in Hablot Knight Browne’s “dark” illustrations for the novels of Charles Dickens

    Get PDF
    In the early gothic literature of the eighteenth century danger lurked in the darkness beneath the pointed arches of gothic buildings. During the nineteenth century there was a progressive, although never complete, dislocation of gothic literary readings from gothic architecture. This article explores a phase in that development through discussion of a series of ‘dark’ illustrations produced by Hablot Knight Browne to illustrate novels by Charles Dickens. These show the way in which the rounded arches of neo-classical architecture were depicted in the mid-nineteenth century as locales of oppression and obscurity. Such depictions acted, in an age of political and moral reform, to critique the values of the system of power and authority that such architecture represented

    Gothic Revival Architecture Before Horace Walpole's Strawberry Hill

    Get PDF
    The Gothic Revival is generally considered to have begun in eighteenth-century Britain with the construction of Horace Walpole’s villa, Strawberry Hill, Twickenham, in the late 1740s. As this chapter demonstrates, however, Strawberry Hill is in no way the first building, domestic or otherwise, to have recreated, even superficially, some aspect of the form and ornamental style of medieval architecture. Earlier architects who, albeit often combining it with Classicism, worked in the Gothic style include Sir Christopher Wren, Nicholas Hawksmoor, William Kent and Batty Langley, aspects of whose works are explored here. While not an exhaustive survey of pre-1750 Gothic Revival design, the examples considered in this chapter reveal how seventeenth- and eighteenth-century Gothic emerged and evolved over the course of different architects’ careers, and how, by the time that Walpole came to create his own Gothic ‘castle’, there was already in existence in Britain a sustained Gothic Revivalist tradition

    The Gothic and eighteenth century visual art

    No full text

    Sculpture and the two art histories

    No full text

    The body of the blasphemer

    No full text

    William Etty: ‘A child of the Royal Academy’

    No full text
    The discourse of the 'British School' which took shape around 1800 was both a step towards, and a means of apprehending the anticipation of, the artistic field in its modern formation. This chapter elaborates the regulations surrounding entry into the Schools and progression through them, in which works of art submitted for assessment were always judged 'blind'. As the opening lines of the most recent biography of the painter William Etty assert: 'Anyone in early nineteenth-century England deciding to enter upon a career as an artist was bound to look to the Royal Academy for training, opportunities and recognition. There was a clear sense among Etty's contemporaries, and which has remained among art historians ever since, that Etty's untiring dedication to the study of the Academic nude presented a challenge to conventional taste, and an interpretative problem

    Engraving’s third dimension

    No full text

    Henry Fuseli and gothic spectacle

    No full text
    In this essay, Martin Myrone explores aspects of the art of the Swiss-born painter Henry Fuseli (1741-1825) in the context of the transformation of the public culture of art in late-eighteenth-century Britain. Considering Fuseli's paintings of invented subjects exhibited at the Royal Academy in the 1780s, and his highly idiosyncratic and imaginative interpretation of Miltonic and other source material, the essay argues for the emergence in his work of a distinctively spectacular aesthetic, allied in its narrative effects and thematics both to gothic literature and to the new technologies of popular entertainment, notably the Phantasmagoria

    The Chatterton of sculpture': Thomas Procter and the martyrology of the British School

    No full text
    The name of the sculptor and painter Thomas Procter does not feature prominently in modern accounts of British art at the end of the eighteenth century. The substantial modern biographical account of Procter appears in Thomas Brayshaw's antiquarian history of the parish of Giggleswick in Yorkshire, where the artist was born and raised. Brayshaw was able to draw on the family's memories as well as documentary sources and access to the few paintings and miniatures by Procter that had passed down in the family. During Procter's lifetime, his three exhibited works in sculpture, shown at the Royal Academy in 1785, 1786 and 1792, were received rapturously. Procter's reputation endured through mid-century, both at home and abroad. A separate, romanticised account of Procter's tragic life declaring him as 'the Chatterton of sculpture', tragically short-lived poet who served as the archetype of creative genius, was published in the literary annual The Winter's Wreath in 1828, and was republished in Britain and America
    corecore