Description

Book Synopsis
This collection examines the development of art criticism across Russia and Western Europe in the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries. Art criticism articulated local ideas about functions of art but, more importantly, it also became one of the most responsive fields in which a larger, transnational European exchange of ideas about the role of critical discourse could take place. Art criticism of this period was also rich in rhetorical strategies and textual diversity.
International contributors to this volume, who include art historians, cultural historians, and specialists in critical and philosophical discourse, examine the emergence of art critical discourse in a variety of cultural and geo-political contexts.

Trade Review
«With its Franco-Russian polarity, this adventurous collection opens perspectives in nineteenth-century art criticism, provoking challenging ideas about nineteenth-century art writing across languages, economics and polemic.» (Richard Thomson, Watson Gordon Professor of Fine Art, University of Edinburgh)

Table of Contents
Contents: Carol Adlam/Juliet Simpson: Introduction. Critical Exchanges: Artwriting in Eighteenth- and Nineteenth-Century Europe – Andy Hamilton: Criticism, Connoisseurship and Appreciation – Katerina Deligiorgi: The Convergence of Ethics and Aesthetics: Schiller’s Concept of the ‘Naive’ and Objects of Distant Antiquity – Richard Wrigley: Sense of Place in Eighteenth-Century Salon Criticism – Juliet Simpson: Relative Values? Ideas of ‘Real’ and ‘Symbolic’ Worth in Fin-de-Siècle French Art Criticism – Aaron J. Cohen: Profession or Politics? Modernism and the Rhetoric of Art Criticism in Late Imperial Russia, 1898-1917 – Claudia Mattos: The Torchlight Visit: Guiding the Eye through Late Eighteenth and Early Nineteenth-Century Antique Sculpture Galleries – Debbie Challis: Charles Newton and the British Museum: Articulating a Science of Ancient Art in the Nineteenth Century – Meaghan Clarke: Translating nudus: Modernity and the British Academy’s New Clothes – Marijke Jonker: La Font de Saint-Yenne: Jansenism and the Beginnings of Independent Art Criticism in France – Alexey Makhrov: Defining Art Criticism in Nineteenth-Century Russia: Vladimir Stasov as Independent Critic – Elizabeth Kridl Valkenier: Ilia Repin and His Critics – Antonia Napp: Johann Buhle’s Zhurnal iziashchnykh iskusstv: The German Source of Russian Art Criticism – Rosalind P. Blakesley: Emile Zola’s Art Criticism in Russia – Ilia Dorontchenkov: Between Isolation and Drang nach Westen: Russian Criticism and Modern Western Art around 1900 – Emma Minns: ‘New, Strange, and Beautiful to English Eyes’: British Reviews of Representations of Russia at the Beginning of the Twentieth Century – Yves Landerouin: Ruskin, Whistler, Wilde, Proust: The Dispute about Creative Criticism – Helen Bridge: Rilke’s Neue Gedichte and the Visual Arts.

Critical Exchange: Art Criticism of the

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    A Paperback / softback by Juliet Simpson, Juliet Simpson

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      Publisher: Verlag Peter Lang
      Publication Date: 07/01/2009
      ISBN13: 9783039115563, 978-3039115563
      ISBN10: 3039115561

      Description

      Book Synopsis
      This collection examines the development of art criticism across Russia and Western Europe in the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries. Art criticism articulated local ideas about functions of art but, more importantly, it also became one of the most responsive fields in which a larger, transnational European exchange of ideas about the role of critical discourse could take place. Art criticism of this period was also rich in rhetorical strategies and textual diversity.
      International contributors to this volume, who include art historians, cultural historians, and specialists in critical and philosophical discourse, examine the emergence of art critical discourse in a variety of cultural and geo-political contexts.

      Trade Review
      «With its Franco-Russian polarity, this adventurous collection opens perspectives in nineteenth-century art criticism, provoking challenging ideas about nineteenth-century art writing across languages, economics and polemic.» (Richard Thomson, Watson Gordon Professor of Fine Art, University of Edinburgh)

      Table of Contents
      Contents: Carol Adlam/Juliet Simpson: Introduction. Critical Exchanges: Artwriting in Eighteenth- and Nineteenth-Century Europe – Andy Hamilton: Criticism, Connoisseurship and Appreciation – Katerina Deligiorgi: The Convergence of Ethics and Aesthetics: Schiller’s Concept of the ‘Naive’ and Objects of Distant Antiquity – Richard Wrigley: Sense of Place in Eighteenth-Century Salon Criticism – Juliet Simpson: Relative Values? Ideas of ‘Real’ and ‘Symbolic’ Worth in Fin-de-Siècle French Art Criticism – Aaron J. Cohen: Profession or Politics? Modernism and the Rhetoric of Art Criticism in Late Imperial Russia, 1898-1917 – Claudia Mattos: The Torchlight Visit: Guiding the Eye through Late Eighteenth and Early Nineteenth-Century Antique Sculpture Galleries – Debbie Challis: Charles Newton and the British Museum: Articulating a Science of Ancient Art in the Nineteenth Century – Meaghan Clarke: Translating nudus: Modernity and the British Academy’s New Clothes – Marijke Jonker: La Font de Saint-Yenne: Jansenism and the Beginnings of Independent Art Criticism in France – Alexey Makhrov: Defining Art Criticism in Nineteenth-Century Russia: Vladimir Stasov as Independent Critic – Elizabeth Kridl Valkenier: Ilia Repin and His Critics – Antonia Napp: Johann Buhle’s Zhurnal iziashchnykh iskusstv: The German Source of Russian Art Criticism – Rosalind P. Blakesley: Emile Zola’s Art Criticism in Russia – Ilia Dorontchenkov: Between Isolation and Drang nach Westen: Russian Criticism and Modern Western Art around 1900 – Emma Minns: ‘New, Strange, and Beautiful to English Eyes’: British Reviews of Representations of Russia at the Beginning of the Twentieth Century – Yves Landerouin: Ruskin, Whistler, Wilde, Proust: The Dispute about Creative Criticism – Helen Bridge: Rilke’s Neue Gedichte and the Visual Arts.

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