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Visualizing the Nineteenth-Century Home Modern Art and the Decorative Impulse

Langue : Anglais

Coordonnateur : Lasc Anca I.

Couverture de l’ouvrage Visualizing the Nineteenth-Century Home
The nineteenth century - the Era of the Interior - witnessed the steady displacement of art from the ceilings, walls, and floors of aristocratic and religious interiors to the everyday spaces of bourgeois households, subject to their own enhanced ornamentation. Following the 1863 Salon des refuses, the French State began to channel mediocre painters into the decorative arts. England, too, launched an extensive reform of the decorative arts, resulting in more and more artists engaged in the production and design of complete interiors. America soon followed. Present art historical scholarship - still indebted to a modernist discourse that sees cultural progress to be synonymous with the removal of ornament from both utilitarian objects and architectural spaces - has not yet acknowledged the importance of the decorative arts in the myriad interior spaces of the 1800s. Nor has mainstream art history reckoned with the importance of the interior in nineteenth-century life and thought. Aimed at an interdisciplinary audience, including art and design historians, historians of the modern interior, interior designers, visual culture theorists, and scholars of nineteenth-century material culture, this collection of essays studies the modern interior in new ways. The volume addresses the double nature of the modern interior as both space and image, blurring the boundaries between arts and crafts, decoration and high art, two-dimensional and three-dimensional design, trompe-l'oeil effects and spatial practices. In so doing, it redefines the modern interior and its objects as essential components of modern art.

List of Illustrations
List of Contributors

At Home, in the Nineteenth Century: Modern Art and the Decorative Impulse
Anca I Lasc

Part I: The Modern Interior as Space

1 The Microcosm as Interior in Théophile Gautier’s "Marilhat"
Marika Knowles

2 Rural Heroes for Urban Patrons: Millet’s Peasants in the Parisian Home
Johanna Ruth Epstein

3 A Humbug Home: An Examination of the Model Cottage at the Great Exhibition of 1851
Edward Hollis

4 The Domestic Interior as a Tactile Space: Aimé-Jules Dalou and Pierre-Auguste Renoir
Kathryn Brown

5 The Novelist and the Artist: Rachilde, Félix Vallotton, and Shared Strategies in the Representation of the Decadent Interior
Georgina Downey

Part II: The Modern Interior as Image

6 Taking the Museum Home: Maria Cosway’s Gallery of the Louvre and the Domestic Interior Anne Nellis Richter

7 Fashioning the (Masculine) Interior: Tissot, Portraiture, Photography and the Fashion Plate
Justine De Young

8 The Modern Interior Stripped Bare: Gustave Caillebotte’s Intérieur Démeublé
Elizabeth Benjamin

9 Imperial Anxiety and Aggressive Décor: Imaging the Domestic Interior of the German Kaiserreich
Marianne Eggler

10 Faire Tapisserie: Edouard Vuillard’s Decoration for Dr. Vaquez
Cindy Kang

Conclusion: Visualizing the Nineteenth-Century Home
Hollis Clayson

Index

Anca I. Lasc

Date de parution :

15.6x23.4 cm

Disponible chez l'éditeur (délai d'approvisionnement : 14 jours).

80,03 €

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Date de parution :

15.6x23.4 cm

Disponible chez l'éditeur (délai d'approvisionnement : 14 jours).

183,14 €

Ajouter au panier