Turner and Byron

Turner and Byron
Title Turner and Byron PDF eBook
Author David Blayney Brown
Publisher Tate Publishing(UK)
Pages 144
Release 1992
Genre Art
ISBN

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Venice with Turner

Venice with Turner
Title Venice with Turner PDF eBook
Author Ian Warrell
Publisher Tate Publishing
Pages 128
Release 2020-09-15
Genre
ISBN 9781849767033

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Join Turner (1775-1851) as he progresses through the city, beginning at St. Mark's Basilica with the campanile towering above and the coral-colored exterior of the Doge's Palace. Drift onward toward the Bridge of Sighs and take a detour past the Hotel Europa, where Turner preferred to stay. Travel onward past the Giardini Reali, the Punta della Dogana and Santa Maria della Salute on your way to San Giorgio Maggiore and the Accademia. Drift away from the bustling markets around the Rialto on the Grand Canal heading toward the Frari and the Scuola Grande di San Rocco, taking in the inspirations for Venetian masters such as Tintoretto and Veronese.

Byron

Byron
Title Byron PDF eBook
Author Walter Alwyn Briscoe
Publisher
Pages 514
Release 1924
Genre
ISBN

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Cultivating Picturacy

Cultivating Picturacy
Title Cultivating Picturacy PDF eBook
Author James A. W. Heffernan
Publisher Baylor University Press
Pages 439
Release 2006
Genre Visual communication
ISBN 1932792414

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While words typically frame and regulate our experience of art, the study explains how pictures can contest the authority of the words we use to interpret art.

Byron

Byron
Title Byron PDF eBook
Author Ethel Colburn Mayne
Publisher
Pages 380
Release 1912
Genre Poets, English
ISBN

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Turner

Turner
Title Turner PDF eBook
Author Franny Moyle
Publisher Penguin
Pages 592
Release 2016-10-25
Genre Biography & Autobiography
ISBN 073522093X

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The life of one of Western art's most admired and misunderstood painters J.M.W. Turner is one of the most important figures in Western art, and his visionary work paved the way for a revolution in landscape painting. Over the course of his lifetime, Turner strove to liberate painting from an antiquated system of patronage. Bringing a new level of expression and color to his canvases, he paved the way for the modern artist. Turner was very much a man of his changing era. In his lifetime, he saw Britain ravaged by Napoleonic wars, revived by the Industrial Revolution, and embarked upon a new moment of Imperial glory with the ascendancy of Queen Victoria. His own life embodied astonishing transformation. Born the son of a barber in Covent Garden, he was buried amid pomp and ceremony in St. Paul's Cathedral. Turner was accepted into the prestigious Royal Academy at the height of the French Revolution when a climate of fear dominated Britain. Unable to travel abroad he explored at home, reimagining the landscape to create some of the most iconic scenes of his country. But his work always had a profound human element. When a moment of peace allowed travel into Europe, Turner was one of the first artists to capture the beauty of the Alps, to revive Venice as a subject, and to follow in Byron’s footsteps through the Rhine country. While he was commercially successful for most of his career, Turner's personal life remained fraught. His mother suffered from mental illness and was committed to Bedlam. Turner never married but had several long-term mistresses and illegitimate daughters. His erotic drawings were numerous but were covered up by prurient Victorians after his death. Turner's late, impressionistic work was held up by his Victorian detractors as example of a creeping madness. Affection for the artist’s work soured. John Ruskin, the greatest of all 19th century art critics, did what he could to rescue Turner’s reputation, but Turner’s very last works confounded even his greatest defender. TURNER humanizes this surprising genius while placing him in his fascinating historical context. Franny Moyle brilliantly tells the story of the man to give us an astonishing portrait of the artist and a vivid evocation of Britain and Europe in flux.

The challenge of the sublime

The challenge of the sublime
Title The challenge of the sublime PDF eBook
Author Hélène Ibata
Publisher Manchester University Press
Pages 382
Release 2018-02-05
Genre Art
ISBN 1526117428

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This book examines the links between the unprecedented visual inventiveness of the Romantic period in Britain and eighteenth-century theories of the sublime. Edmund Burke’s Philosophical Enquiry into the Origin of our Ideas of the Sublime and Beautiful (1757), in particular, is shown to have directly or indirectly challenged visual artists to explore not just new themes, but also new compositional strategies and visual media such as panoramas and book illustrations, by arguing that the sublime was beyond the reach of painting. More significantly, it began to call into question mimetic representational models, causing artists to reflect about the presentation of the unpresentable and drawing attention to the process of artistic production itself, rather than the finished artwork.