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What Was History Painting and What Is It Now?
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Edited by:
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Language:
English
Published/Copyright:
2019
About this book
The dominant visual language of European painting from the Renaissance to the nineteenth century, history paintings were formidable in their monumental scale, ambitious moral lessons, and intricate narratives. With the rise of modernist avant-gardes, the genre receded from the forefront of artistic production into the realm of nostalgia. Yet history painting cast a shadow that would subtly colour even the works that sought to displace it. Exploring the resilience of this distinctive mode of visual representation, What Was History Painting and What Is It Now? brings together an internationally distinguished group of scholars to trace the endurance, adaptation, and mutation of history painting. These studies offer a reexamination of the fortunes of the genre from North America to Europe and Africa. Organized around illuminating themes, the book explores the creation of an audience attuned to the genre's didactic aims, the entry of history painting into the marketplace of commercial art and attractions, and the reimagination of the mode in response to the edicts of modern and contemporary art. Spanning the full range and diversity of history painting, this collection is a broad reconsideration of the tradition and the vibrant ways in which it resonates through the art of the present.
Author / Editor information
Contributor: Mark Salber Phillips
Mark Salber Phillips is professor emeritus of history at Carleton University.
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Contributor: Jordan Bear
Jordan Bear is associate professor of the history of art at the University of Toronto.
Reviews
"One of the most engaging and provocative collections of essays that I've read in some time." Douglas Fordham, University of Virginia
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"This coherent and well-integrated collective work is the result of a brilliant idea, that of rejecting a simple definition of history painting and a simple story of the decline of a genre, accepting rival definitions and replacing 'decline' with 'change.' It breaks new ground and should inspire further research." Peter Burke, Emmanuel College, University of Cambridge, and author of Popular Culture in Early Modern Europe
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"The case study format functions as an effective litmus test, prompting the reader, as Phillips and Bear do in their respective introductions, to consider other works of art while grappling with the idea of history painting as a heuristic. Other media slide naturally into this space, as many of the contributors show. The result intelligently complicates history painting, both neutralizing the authorial grip of the theoretical paradigm while also enhancing the nuance of the work under scrutiny. ... the idea of permanence is rigorously explored vis-à-vis the works of art, especially in terms of the medium. Here, as in the book, is a good place to end: the multi-media, and multi-sensory, work of eco-artists Rúrí, Mariele Neudecker, Katie Paterson, and Isabelle Hayeur pick up on the most efficacious feature of history painting for our time: a call to action." RACAR
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"In tracing the ways in which artists utilized the mechanics of the genre outside of the constraints set by the European academies, this volume may serve world historians in finding creative ways to decode the visual structures of history painting as they served not only to support, but to critique or subvert ideologies and artistic concepts." Journal of World History
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Front Matter
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Contents
vii -
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Introduction: What Was History Painting and What Is It Now?
3 - Human Figures and Human Viewers
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Figuring History at the End of the Renaissance: Notes on Agnolo Bronzino’s Martyrdom of San Lorenzo
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A Rococo Aesthetic: History Painting and the Self's Embodiment
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History Painting Redistanced: From Benjamin West to David Wilkie
67 - History Painting in the Marketplace
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James Gillray's The Death of the Great Wolf and the Satiric Alternative to History Painting
90 -
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Historical Distance and Historic Doubts: Representing Napoleon in Exile
111 -
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Landscape and the Problem of History: Thomas Cole and Anglo-Atlantic Modernity
131 - History Painting after Modernism
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Myth, Melancholy, and History: Figural Dialectics and José Clemente Orozco's Epic of American Civilization
160 -
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History Painting after Conceptual Art
182 -
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What Is the History in Contemporary History Painting?
204 -
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Unwritten History: William Kentridge's Triumphs and Laments, Piazza Tevere, Rome, 2016
215 -
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Reimagining Global Modernity in the Age of Neo-Liberal Patronage: The History Paintings of Julie Mehretu
234 -
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“Earth Death Pictures” as Contemporary History Painting
254 -
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Bibliography
273 -
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Contributors
295 -
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Index
299
Publishing information
Pages and Images/Illustrations in book
eBook published on:
May 25, 2023
eBook ISBN:
9780228000358
Pages and Images/Illustrations in book
eBook ISBN:
9780228000358
Audience(s) for this book
For a non-specialist adult audience