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Whither the Field of Nineteenth-Century Art History?
commentaries by Annette Blaugrund, Werner Busch,
Henri Dorra, Lynda Nead, and Linda Nochlin
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Editor's Introduction
For more than thirty years the field of nineteenth-century art history has
been the terrain par excellence to experiment with new theoretical
approaches to the study and interpretation of art. At the same time, revisionismthe
attempt to open and broaden the canonhas been applied more aggressively
to nineteenth-century art than to any other period. Our field has led the
way in allowing for the inclusion of caricatures, book illustrations, posters,
photography, and other forms of visual culture.
All of this activity has had both positive and negative effects. On the
one hand, nineteenth-century art history has become one of the most exciting
and challenging fields in which to work; on the other hand, it has often
seemed like a battlefield on which scholars of different viewpoints and
persuasions fight to defend closely held opinions.
Now that we have entered the new millennium, the nineteenth century has
become one century removed from our own. Many of us cannot help but wonder
what will happen to the field. To paraphrase Gauguin, we know whence we
came, but where are we, and where are we going? As editors of this journal,
we have mapped out one avenue that parallels the direction the wide world
is goingglobalization. Yet there are other paths, both old and new,
that also lead to insights and innovative ways of understanding.
To map out some of these paths, we have asked five distinguished colleagues,
none involved in the journal's creation, to share their thoughts on these
matters. No formal guidelines were provided to the commentators, who were
asked simply to reflect upon the field and its future. Thus, their statements
range widely in length and tone. We hope their reflections will stimulate
you and possibly even entice you to email your own thoughts to us.
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Petra ten-Doesschate Chu
chupetra@shu.edu
Managing Editor
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Peter Trippi
ptrippi@aol.com
Executive Editor |
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Annette Blaugrund
Werner Busch
Henri Dorra
Lynda Nead
Linda Nochlin |
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Annette Blaugrund
The past twenty-five years have witnessed many changes in the significance,
study, and analysis of nineteenth-century American art, which has shifted
from a field with few publications to one with many. This productivity has
drawn upon investigation of obscure artists, once-neglected regions, and
newly uncovered works of art; historical and cultural contextual information;
and evaluation of a wider variety of objects, such as sculpture, watercolors,
sketchbooks, drawings, and decorative arts, including frames. |
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The question whether nineteenth-century art will remain relevant in our
new century can be answered with another question: Has earlier artbe
it Greek, medieval, or Renaissancebecome irrelevant? The answer
is, of course, no. The art of the past informs and influences not only
today's artists but also their audiences. Why should this not hold true
for the nineteenth century?
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Without doubt, nineteenth-century styles
and themes have impacted on current art. Witness the Hudson River-like landscapes
of Stephen Hannock, whose smoothly sanded canvases in gilded frames mimic
nineteenth-century American landscapes. And Red Grooms, whose two- and three-dimensional
images of earlier artists memorialize their achievements while using current
innovative print and oil techniques. Or Ellsworth Kelly's simple line drawings
influenced in part by John James Audubon's watercolors of birds. Many contemporary
artists emulate or use as their starting point imagery from this earlier
time.
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The revival of
interest in American art of the nineteenth century is demonstrated through
such exhibitions as "Paris 1889: American Artists of the Universal
Exposition" (National Academy of Design, 198990)in which
I brought to public attention works by artists whose names were once familiar
but had become obscure: Frederick Bridgman, T. Alexander Harrison, George
Hitchcock, (Daniel) Ridgway Knight, Gari Melchers, Julius Stewart, and Edwin
Lord Weeksand "1900: Art at the Crossroads," organized by
MaryAnne Stevens and Robert Rosenblum for the Royal Academy of Arts and
Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum, respectively. Stevens and Rosenblum juxtaposed
unlikely pairs of contemporaneous works that revealed influences and parallels,
some of which forecast modernist trends. Exhibitions of this nature will
recur and surely will foster new audiences for nineteenth-century art. |
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Another encouraging sign is the space museums now allocate to the nineteenth
century. Particularly relevant is the formation of an institution such
as the Dahesh Museum of Art in New York, dedicated to academic painting
and sculpture.
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Of utmost importance is that nineteenth-century
art historyEuropean, American, internationalcontinues to be
taught. Changes in the methodology of teaching nineteenth-century art over
the last fifteen years, including semiotics and deconstruction, seem to
have reached the end of the continuum, and it is hoped that a more balanced
manner of studying artincluding formal analysis and technical examination,
among other traditional methodswill be reinstated. Linking careful
observation with psycho-socio-cultural factors will allow students once
again to look and read the work of artnot just read into it. |
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Affecting all of this in a truly positive
sense is the Internet. This worldwide network should help bring to light
many works that have languished in private collections and museum storage.
It will also help disseminate information, making library holdings and digitized
images accessible and opening new doors for examination and discovery, and
thereby introducing unexplored areas for research. |
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For the National Academy of Design, one
of the oldest art organizations in the United States, the challenge is similar.
Rather then reinventing itself, this artists' institution, founded in 1825
to promote American art though exhibitions and education, preserves the
past while making itself relevant. To this end, the academy's academicians
are striving to elect artists of diverse stylistic bents and encourage participation
by all factions. They have embraced the use of the Internet and other electronic
means while holding fast to traditional modalities of architecture, graphics,
painting on canvas, and sculpture. The academicians are encompassing the
past, present, and future of American art in a number of ways: by preserving
a historical collection of art frequently exhibited and consulted by art
students; by teaching these students; and by holding exhibitions of nineteenth-,
twentieth-, and twenty-first-century art from elsewhere. |
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In the twenty-first century, I foresee nothing
but excitement for those entering the field, and I envy them the opportunity
of researching and dispersing their findings through new technologies such
as this very e-journal. It is indeed a brave new world for the study of
nineteenth-century art.
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Werner Busch
Discourse theory and deconstruction have led to a questioning of authors'
intentions and also of the possibility of unequivocally understanding the
meaning of works of art. There is always something authoritarian about assigning
meaning. So far, so good. |
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More and more, cultural and historical approaches
such as gender studies and socio-history are being employed to obtain insights
into a work of art. This, too, is good. However, such a democratization
of approach brings with it the danger of an "anything goes" attitude,
and imposes a real threat on a core aspect of art history. The art of describing
aesthetic experience is in danger of being lost, for despite whatever conditionality
surrounds a work of art, description is nevertheless capable of conveying
something of its intrinsic value. For some art of the twentieth century
one may justifiably question the existence of such a value, but for the
art of the nineteenth century its presence is indisputable. |
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The much-contested autonomy of art in the
tradition of Kant and Schiller means nothing more than art reflecting on
its own productive and receptive possibilities in the wake of the loss of
its immediate function for state and church. The nineteenth century is the
century that sought to sound out all artistic possibilities in the light
of technical and scientific advancement, the ever-increasing complexity
of which art could at best only reflect. The loss of the means to explain
the world (Hegel) is compensated for in the manifestation of the arbitrary,
the fragmentary, the repulsive, the questionable, and the uncomplicated
as the reality of life. Aware of what has been lost forever, art conserves,
and in this it is deeply human. |
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The goal of future art historical scholarship
will be to place this dimension of nineteenth-century art into a historiographic
context, but also to preserve it. Large areas of research could be: |
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- The relationship between art and natural sciences
- The change from religion to aestheticism
- The emancipation of the lower genres
- The effect of new methods and technical achievements on existing ones
- Explaining the interdependency of the evolving academic discipline
of history and the diminishing importance of history painting
- The description of art as a field comprising the coordinates: artist,
critic, art history, art market, and museum; the result would be the
history of the changing status of the arts
- The attempt to define an aesthetic theory that would incorporate the
relationship between production and reception
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Henri Dorra
The tools of the historian of nineteenth-century art have improved vastly
in both quantity and scope in the past few decades. A number of new and
revised catalogues raisonnés have appeared on Delacroix, Ingres,
Cézanne, Gauguin prints, Khnopff, Moreau, and others. Among the published
correspondences are Cassatt, Pissarro, and Courbet, the Van Gogh archives
in Amsterdam, and the edition of Gauguin in progress. New facsimile editions
of artists' own writings have uncovered hitherto unsuspected gems and eliminated
apparent nonsense. On-line and CD-ROM bibliographical indices and on-line
library catalogues have turned out to be wonderful time-savers. Documentary
archives have been expanded and new ones (such as the Getty's) established.
American prints and drawings roomsif not all othersserve scholars
generously and effectively. |
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Extraordinary photographic librariesthe
Frick, Witt, Louvre, Bibliothèque Nationale, and many moreoffer
huge collections. Despite their flaws, abundant color plates adorning even
banal publications afford new possibilities for studying the colors of works
of art difficult to access. Important museums now permit photography, and
fast film insures fair results. The portable computer obviates the need
for carrying index cards when travelingin advance of a hernia, to
paraphrase Duchampand makes it possible to file one's research notes
immediately and efficiently, while the electronic printer has eliminated
the need for expensive and occasionally temperamental typists. |
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Although the bibliographic, photographic,
and technological tools of art-historical scholarship have been enhanced
significantly in the past few decades, millions of titles printed on pulp
paper during the nineteenth century are turning to dust. Only a few libraries
worldwide are attempting to save some, and then only on a minor scale. Great
storehouses such as the Bibliothèque Nationale, unable to cope with
the vastness of the problem, seem more intent on letting these resources
rot than on making them available to scholars for a last look. Duplicating
such books would cause them further harm, but would also make their contents
available for a long time to come. The mutilation of books in libraries
is extraordinary, as are losses through theft and inaccurate filing. |
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In addition, the hoarding of works of art
is worsening: tax evasion, purchase with ill-gotten funds, the reasonable
pursuit of privacy, and concerns about provenance and safety all come into
play. I was once asked to examine a painting in a Geneva bank vault, only
to find myself in a dazzling museum! |
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Also on the debit side is the temptation
of some recent scholars to link art with politics, sociology, and "gender"
in a somewhat empirical mode, which has occasionally turned art history
into a platform for subjective cognition and ratiocination. A reversal of
this trend is in order. |
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Quite unable to chart the future, I prefer
instead to identify some of the projects I am sorry not to have tackled. |
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An abundant supply of post-Grande Revolution
periodicals at the Bibliothèque Nationale, most containing Salon
reviews, as well as the literature of romanticism lend themselves to studying
the evolution of landscape painting in France from Joseph Vernet to Valenciennes,
Michallon, Bertin, and Corot. Valenciennes, much influenced by the color
practices of Joseph Vernet and himself a student of light, authored a treatise
on landscape painting that had considerable impact. This area is relatively
uncharted and could be very rewarding. |
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Closer to aesthetics, a study of the evolution
of the concept of naturalism in relation to artistic developments, from
the time of Rousseau and Senancour to impressionism and post-impressionism,
could be rich. This would take into account Sand and Leroux, Thoré-Burger,
Castagnary, Baudelaire, Duranty, Flaubert, Zola, and many others. |
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The kaleidoscope of Ruskin's aesthetics
in relation to the development of British art should receive more thorough
treatment than it has to date. Increasingly, Ingres stands out as a vigorous,
subtle, and sometimes cunning portraitist. The character and temperament
of his sitters can be evaluated on the basis of their social and political
role and from their correspondence. A study of Ingres as a psychological
portraitist seems promising. |
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Scenes by Delacroix inspired by literature
have been linked successfully with their sources, yet the scope of his iconographic
inventivenessin terms of the spirit and imagery of romantic literaturehas
never been analyzed thoroughly. Such a study would break important new ground.
Nothing has yet been written of the day-to-day political and social goals
of Daumier. Anyone who would become familiar with his era's newspapersnow
largely available on microfilmcould produce a monumental study of
the artist's thought in relation to the politics and society of his time,
throwing light on all three. Since caricaturists must express complex thoughts
and emotions with a few lines, they are necessarily part-symbolists. Such
a study could throw light on Daumier's contribution as a proto-symbolist
in the days of romanticism and naturalism. |
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Linda Nochlin's sensational article on the
iconography of Bonjour, Monsieur Courbet, and an equally impressive
one on Studio of the Artist
have added immeasurably to our
understanding of Courbet's allusions to social and political developments
achieved through means that foreshadow symbolism. Seen in this light, the
Barbizon artists also appear as proto-Symbolists, a fact that did not escape
van Gogh. These characteristics deserve to be studied in the broader context
of romantic and naturalist developments. Indeed, the symbolism of such artists
as Hugo, Meryon, and Bresdin deserves systematic study. The same can be
said of Moreau and Puvis and, above all, Redon. |
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Light and witty books have been written
on the iconography of the Pre-Raphaelites. It so happens that these artists'
psychological characterizations also have a powerfully dramatic side, which
emerges indirectly in symbolic ways. Here, too, a study of these works'
iconography in relation to the writings of artists and critics, and the
general literature of the time, could break new ground. |
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I am currently completing a study of Gauguin's
symbolism. With evidence provided by the works themselves and by his writings,
it is possible to assign a symbolic meaning to practically every one of
his repetitive figures as well as others. Such meanings remained quite consistent
throughout his career, and it is essentially through a play of permutations
and combinations of these figures that the overtones of symbolic meaning
emerge. Similar results would probably be harder to reach in connection
with the work of van Gogh, but there is no doubt in my mind that a systematic
study of his writings would also reveal much about his symbolism and thus
enrich our understanding of his achievement. The illustration of Belgian
and Dutch symbolist books deserves attention, as does the symbolist invention
of the great craftsmen, from Gallé and Lalique to Vever. |
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Ultimately, one failing which sometimes
mars nineteenth-century art history must be overcome. The accumulation of
data and its classification and systematic analysis are all of crucial importance,
yet by themselves they are useful only in the way a telephone directory
isand no more. Evoking the lives, goals, and achievements of the artists
listed therein, and the patterns therein, are quite another matter. As Mallarmé
put it: "[I]f the precious stones with which one adorns oneself do
not convey a state of the soul, one has no right to wear them." Objectively
speaking, of course!
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Lynda Nead
Nineteenth-century art history has played an equivocal part in the development
of the discipline. Often in the vanguard of new approaches to the study
of visual images (I am thinking here of the influential work of scholars
such as T. J. Clark and Griselda Pollock), nineteenth-century study has
also frequently been at the tail-end of art historical innovation, as
witnessed in the seemingly endless reiterations of Impressionist masterpieces
and the equally tiresome obsession with artistic value and canonical objects
of study.
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One of the ways in which nineteenth-century
art history has led the field, and made a significant contribution to cultural
history more generally, is in its exploration of interdisciplinary research.
The best historians of nineteenth-century art have drawn (broadly, but discriminatingly)
on diverse areas of the humanities and social sciences in order to produce
rich and nuanced analyses of the cultural production and consumption of
the period. Interdisciplinarity is not, however, a catchall solution to
the problems and limitations of the discipline; nor is it an easy answer
to the correct and rather prim question "Whither Nineteenth-Century
Art History?"
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Interdisciplinarity raises as many problems
as it provides answers. Its strength lies in its potential to call into
question what counts as a single discipline, or as academic expertise. But
all too easily it can be accused of academic eclecticism; or, conversely,
of fostering intellectual protectionism under the guise of disciplinary
competence. And yet, interdisciplinarityin the sense of a drawing
together of intellectual materials and protocols in order to open up new
intellectual sitesstill has much to offer the future of art history.
Rather than an easy complementarity between individual disciplines, I would
seek a critical engagement and resistance of subjects within the interdisciplinary. |
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It is helpful to hold on to a degree of uncertainty when working across
disciplines. Interdisciplinarity should test and strain the boundaries
of individual subject areas; we should expect misfit and inconsistency
as much as conformity and reiteration. Interdisciplinarity, then, ought
to produce new questions, new objects of study, and new forms of knowledge.
It ought not to provide additional support for the same campaigning ground.
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Experience here strengthens my theoretical
conviction. I recently worked on a project called "Law and the Image"
with colleagues from Critical Legal Theory. Although we assumed, somewhat
intuitively, that from the beginning there would be considerable common
ground in our shared concern with the relationships between art and power,
we discovered that we came to the issue from different directions and with
divergent approaches. But out of this compound the project did produce new
formulations of questions of the aesthetic, judgment, evidence, and representation. |
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A critical interdisciplinarity should bring
about a reexamination of the nature of individual disciplines. If it fails
to do this, it will also fail to advance and expand the history of art.
The most powerful constraint on the development of nineteenth-century art
history has been its dependence on canonical works of art. It is this convention
which has tied the discipline to a tradition of connoisseurship and which
so often relegated other mass or commercial forms of visual imagery to supplementary
evidence or historical illustration. |
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To the methods
of interdisciplinarity I would therefore add an attention to the historical
study of relationships across visual media. This approach, which has been
described as "intermediality" and which has emerged out of the
history of early film, will, I believe, enrich and expand the intellectual
parameters of nineteenth-century art history. It might also generate a renewed
dialogue between our understanding of the historical past and the present. |
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We live in a multimedia, digital society
which has produced a renewed interest in and preoccupation with all forms
of the visual image. The digital image is not projected or constituted from
without, but emanates from within the computer. This new form of image production
and manipulation has affected fundamentally our understanding of representation,
creativity, technology, and the aesthetic. It also has affected our perception
of the history of visual culture, generating new questions regarding the
prehistory of electronic imaging and the nature of connections across different
visual media in earlier periods. This concern with intermediality is at
the heart of the new subject grouping of which I am a part at Birkbeck College,
University of London. In the School of History of Art, Film, and Visual
Media we are developing an historically driven, critical study of the visual
which attends equally to digital culture and lantern slides, painting and
early cinema, and photography and architecture. This does not mean that
paintings, sculpture, prints, photographs, and moving images are thrown
into an undifferentiated melée labeled "visual culture,"
or that the category "high art" has to be abandoned. Far from
it; this cross-medial approach should be even more attentive to cultural
distinction than previous forms of art history. But it probably does mean
an end to art historical revisionism and to the pointless pursuit of novel
ways of interpreting the same old canonical works of art. |
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The shape of the discipline will necessarily
alter; perhaps its name should change as well. The history of art has, paradoxically,
proved to be remarkably unselfconscious about the main elements of
its namethat is, how its objects of study are defined and what kind
of history it has produced as a result. A shift toward a history of visual
media would force a reappraisal of the material of the discipline and its
nature as an historical field of study. To examine a painting or stereoscopic
slide at various moments in the nineteenth century would be to locate them
in an environment of technological transformation in which definitions of,
for example, "high culture" and "commercial culture"
are constantly shifting and creating new modes of production, new types
of audiences, and new spaces of consumption. |
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The definition of a discipline's objects
of study determines the kinds of history that are finally produced. The
nineteenth-century canon has limited the potential of art history as an
historical discipline. Working across the full register of visual media
in the period creates a different historical profile; it attends to the
connections and relationships between different forms of visual representation
and can be described truly as a history of visual culture. |
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So what routes should nineteenth-century
art history take? They should be interdisciplinary and intermedial. But
they should not be prescriptive. Intellectual forecasting is an outrageous
act of hubris and seems to invite academic nemesis in the forms of institutional
and governmental intervention. Ultimately, the direction of the discipline
likely will be determined by factors that are external to the academy and
related to funding and the organization of cultural capital. Nevertheless,
in an appropriate spirit of humility we can hope for intellectual invention,
imagination and collaboration as the aims of nineteenth-century art history.
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Linda Nochlin
It is difficult to decide, before the fact, just what should be on the agenda
for art historians of the future, but here are some of the categories I
have come up with: |
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Old-fashioned digging in archives, museums,
libraries, and other relevant places. |
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Always relevant to renew and give meaning
to our projects, be they on feminism, queer theory, gender in general, social
history, or ideas about race and ethnicity. |
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The cutting off of art from its creatorfrom
the human acts of making, changing, and sufferingat a certain moment
had a point: to deflate overblown notions of genius and specialness. But
now the time is ripe for a return to biography in a new sense, to biography
as a history of personal making in the world, within community and society.
I am not sure how this is to be done, but I am intrigued by Hannah Arendt's
ideas about biography. This is especially important in the case of women
artists. |
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On "facts," on objects, on bodies,
on history. I mean to put "meditation" in opposition to "research,"
and yet there is no reason for them necessarily to be opposing methods.
Musing, thinking, and meditating can be part of the research process, and
an essential part. They must, ultimately, draw on imaginationdaring
leaps into the meanings produced by visual representation, of all kinds,
high and low. The more technologized the means of art history (computers,
digitalization, virtual museums, etc.), the more individuated and personal
the ends should be. |
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One must think of the specificity of the
nineteenth century, of its character, if you will. Why are the central figures
in criticism Baudelaire and Ruskin and, later, Pater and Mallarmé?
Or, in painting, Manet and Cézanne, who changed our notions of art
and above all, of beauty? |
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And the so-called minor critics and artists,
among them books like Champfleury's Les Eccentriques, that bring
to life a different but living area of a certain time and place. Strange
artists, too, who in their strangeness incorporate another aspect of the
period or move the center to the peripheries. Peripheries are as typical
of periods as they are of centers. The recent exhibition "1900: Art
at the Crossroads" revealed the importance of peripheral art and artists
in a consideration of the centuryunthought-of places like Australia,
or thought-of places like Belgium, or what was going on in Japan or China
in relation to Western art. |
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Scale: Why was "The Big Picture"
so important in the nineteenth century? And what sort of big pictures? Appropriate
for what? Smallness as a reaction to bignessManet's letterheads, the
notion of a personal and intimate art as opposed to a public one. The role
of the Nabis in forging this notion of the intimate, the personal, and the
domestic, as well as the role of gender.
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© 20023 Nineteenth-Century Art Worldwide.
All Rights Reserved.
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