Aan de slag met de collectie:
Geen omslagfoto beschikbaar
Tudor liveliness: vivid art in post-Reformation England
Alternatieve titel
Vivid art in post-Reformation England
Door
Uittreksel
"In Tudor and Jacobean England, visual art was often termed 'lively'. This word was used to describe the full range of visual and material culture - from portraits to funeral monuments, book illustrations to tapestry. To a modern viewer, this claim seems perplexing: what could 'liveliness' have meant in a culture with seemingly little appreciation for illusionistic naturalism? And in a period supposedly characterised by fear of idolatry, how could 'liveliness' have been a good thing? In this wide-ranging and innovative book, Christina Faraday excavates a uniquely Tudor model of vividness: one grounded in rhetorical techniques for creating powerful mental images for audiences. By drawing parallels with the dominant communicative framework of the day, Tudor Liveliness sheds new light on a lost mode of Tudor art criticism and appreciation, revealing how objects across a vast range of genres and contexts were taking part in the same intellectual and aesthetic conversations. By resurrecting a lost model for art theory, Faraday re-enlivens the vivid visual and material culture of Tudor and Jacobean England, recovering its original power to move, impress and delight."-- Inside front cover flap.
Inhoud
Chapter 1. Liveliness -- Chapter 2. Liveliness in the church -- Chapter 3. Portraiture -- Chapter 4. Portrait miniatures -- Chapter 5. Book illustrations -- Chapter 6. Liveliness in the home -- . Epilogue : Liveliness and exploration.
Uitgever
Uitgave
London: Paul Mellon Centre for Studies in British Art, 2023
Jaar
Gaat over
Onderwerp
Periode
1500-1699
Type
Taal
Classificatie
ISBN
- 191310737X
- 9781913107376
Duurzaam webadres
Als u naar dit object wilt verwijzen, gebruik dan de duurzame URL: