Frederic Leighton

WARNING

You are viewing an older version of the Yalebooks website. Please visit out new website with more updated information and a better user experience: https://www.yalebooks.com

Antiquity, Renaissance, Modernity

Edited by Tim Barringer and Elizabeth Prettejohn

View Inside Format: Cloth
Price: $65.00
YUP
Our shopping cart only supports Mozilla Firefox. Please ensure you're using that browser before attempting to purchase.

Liberated from the constraints of tradition, the Pre-Raphaelites of mid-Victorian England produced distinctive representations of nature and society in paintings remarkable for their compositional vitality and hallucinatory effects of color. This lavishly illustrated book provides a fresh appraisal of the Pre-Raphaelite artists and their radical departure from artistic conventions. Tim Barringer explores the meanings so richly encoded in Pre-Raphaelite paintings and analyzes key pictures and their significance within the complex social and cultural matrix of nineteenth-century Britain. In chapters devoted to core themes, the author discusses such artists as John Everett Millais, William Holman Hunt, Dante Gabriel Rossetti, and Ford Madox Brown and their engagement with medieval revivalism, nature worship, issues of class and gender, and the reconciliation of the religious image and realism.

Barringer draws on an imaginative selection of paintings, drawings, and contemporary photographs to suggest that the dynamic energy of Pre-Raphael-ism arose from paradoxes at its heart. Past and present, historicism and modernity, symbolism and realism, as well as tensions between city and country, man and woman, worker and capitalist, colonizer and colonized—all appear within Pre-Raphaelite art. Focusing on these issues, the author casts new light on the Pre-Raphaelites and their innovative work.



Published for the Paul Mellon Center for Studies in British Art

Tim Barringer is assistant professor in the Department of the History of Art at Yale University. Elizabeth Prettejohn is a lecturer at the University of Plymouth in England.


"[This book] provide[s] a very useful and extremely important examination of Leighton’s work in the context of his age and . . . interesting sidelights into his home, his interest in music, and his promotion of new painting."—Martin Chasin, Library Journal

"A fascinating alternative to received Francocentric views of the development of modernism and essential reading for those interested in Victorian art and aestheticism."—Choice

ISBN: 9780300079371
Publication Date: February 8, 1999
Publishing Partner: Published for the Paul Mellon Center for Studies in British Art
384 pages, 7 x 10
100 b/w + 17 color illus.
Men at Work

Art and Labour in Victorian Britain

Tim Barringer

View details
Art for Art's Sake

Aestheticism in Victorian Painting

Elizabeth Prettejohn

View details
Art and Emancipation in Jamaica

Isaac Mendes Belisario and His Worlds

Tim Barringer, Gillian Forrester, and Barbaro Martinez Ruiz

...
View details
Landscape, Innovation, and Nostalgia

The Manton Collection of British Art

Edited by Jay A.

...
View details
On the Viewing Platform

The Panorama between Canvas and Screen

Edited by Katie Trumpener and Tim Barringer

View details
Studies in British Art
After Sir Joshua

Essays on British Art and Cultural History

Richard Wendorf

View details
The Evolution of English Collecting

The Reception of Italian Art in the Tudor and Stuart Periods

Edited and introduced by Edward Chaney

View details
Notorious Muse

The Actress in British Art and Culture 1776–1812

Edited by Robyn Asleson

View details
Those Delightful Regions of Imagination

Essays on George Romney

Edited by Alex Kidson

View details
Towards a Modern Art World

Studies in British Art I

Edited by Brian T. Allen

View details
Albion's Classicism

The Visual Arts in Britain, 1550-1660

Edited by Lucy Gent

View details