Description

Book Synopsis
An in-depth examination of William Blake’s glorious and acclaimed series of twelve monoprints

Among William Blake’s (1757–1827) most widely recognized and highly regarded works as an artist are twelve color printed drawings, or monoprints, conceived and executed in 1795. This book investigates these masterworks, explaining Blake’s technique—one he essentially reinvented, unaware of 17th-century precursors—to show that these works were produced as paintings, and played a crucial role in Blake’s development as a painter. Using material and historical analyses, Joseph Viscomi argues that the monoprints were created as autonomous paintings rather than as illustrations for Blake’s books with an intended viewing order. Enlivened with bountiful illustrations, the text approaches the works within the context of their time, not divorced from ideas expressed in Blake’s writings but not illustrative of or determined by those writings.

Distributed for the Paul Mellon Centre for Studies in British Art

Trade Review
“This volume is devoted to a set of twelve pictures created in 1795 and unanimously considered Blake’s highest achievement...Relying on material evidence and sensible deduction, Visconti reconstructs the whole chronology of the twelve pictures.”—Laurent Bury, Cercles


“The new standard account of how [Blake’s] ‘printed paintings’ were produced and how the works should be interpreted…. The implications of Viscomi’s scholarship will resonate for years to come.”

William Blake's Printed Paintings: Methods,

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A Hardback by Joseph Viscomi

15 in stock


    View other formats and editions of William Blake's Printed Paintings: Methods, by Joseph Viscomi

    Publisher: Paul Mellon Centre for Studies in British Art
    Publication Date: 25/05/2021
    ISBN13: 9781913107208, 978-1913107208
    ISBN10: 1913107205

    Description

    Book Synopsis
    An in-depth examination of William Blake’s glorious and acclaimed series of twelve monoprints

    Among William Blake’s (1757–1827) most widely recognized and highly regarded works as an artist are twelve color printed drawings, or monoprints, conceived and executed in 1795. This book investigates these masterworks, explaining Blake’s technique—one he essentially reinvented, unaware of 17th-century precursors—to show that these works were produced as paintings, and played a crucial role in Blake’s development as a painter. Using material and historical analyses, Joseph Viscomi argues that the monoprints were created as autonomous paintings rather than as illustrations for Blake’s books with an intended viewing order. Enlivened with bountiful illustrations, the text approaches the works within the context of their time, not divorced from ideas expressed in Blake’s writings but not illustrative of or determined by those writings.

    Distributed for the Paul Mellon Centre for Studies in British Art

    Trade Review
    “This volume is devoted to a set of twelve pictures created in 1795 and unanimously considered Blake’s highest achievement...Relying on material evidence and sensible deduction, Visconti reconstructs the whole chronology of the twelve pictures.”—Laurent Bury, Cercles


    “The new standard account of how [Blake’s] ‘printed paintings’ were produced and how the works should be interpreted…. The implications of Viscomi’s scholarship will resonate for years to come.”

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