
This book is a study of the complex relationship between matter and idea that shaped the nineteenth-century culture of art, and that in turn determined the course of still-current accounts of art's nature and value. Fundamental questions about the effects of material conditions on the creation and reception of art arose as early as the nineteenth century, and put important pressures on later eras. The place of class distinctions in the making and reception of art, the relationship between copy and original, the effects of display on art appreciation, even the role of pleasure itself: this book treats these and related issues as productive conceptual challenges with an unresolved relationship to matter at their core. Drawing on recent scholarship on the history of art and its institutions, Material Inspirations places cultural developments such as the emergence of new sites for exhibition and the astonishing proliferation of printed reproductions alongside a wide range of texts including novels, poems, travel guidebooks, compendia of antiquities, and especially the great line of critical writing that emerged in the period. The study vivifies a dynamic era, which is still too often seen as static and unchanging, by emphasizing the transformations taking place throughout the period in precisely those areas that have appeared to promise little more than repetition or continuity: collection, exhibition, and reproduction. The book culminates with the two great critics of the period, John Ruskin and Walter Pater, but it also includes close analysis of other prose writers, as well as poets and novelists ranging from William Blake to Robert Browning, George Eliot to Henry James. Significant developments addressed include the vogue for the representation of Old Masters in the first half of the century, ongoing innovations in the creation and diffusion of reproductions, and the emergence of the field of art history itself. At the heart of each of these the book identifies a ma
This book investigates how the nineteenth-century tension between material conditions and conceptual ideals continues to define contemporary understandings of art's value and nature. Jonah Siegel, a scholar of nineteenth-century literature and culture, utilizes a multidisciplinary framework to examine how institutional shifts in exhibition, reproduction, and collection practices influenced both the creation and reception of art. By analyzing a diverse array of texts and historical developments, the author argues that these nineteenth-century challenges remain central to current critical discourse regarding the status of the art object.
What You Will Find
Scope Limits
Scholars in the field recognize this work as a rigorous examination of the intersection between material culture and aesthetic theory. Readers frequently note the academic density of the prose and the author's ability to synthesize disparate literary and historical sources into a coherent argument.
Page Count:
401
Publication Date:
2020-01-01
Publisher:
OUP Oxford
ISBN-10:
0192599976
ISBN-13:
9780192599971
No comments yet. Be the first to share your thoughts!