Limit search to available items
Book Cover
E-book
Author Bullen, J. B

Title Continental crosscurrents : British criticism and European art 1810-1910 / J.B. Bullen
Published Oxford ; New York : Oxford University Press, 2005

Copies

Description 1 online resource (x, 297 pages) : illustrations
Series OUP E-Books
Summary "Continental Crosscurrents" is a series of case studies reflecting British attitudes to continental art during the nineteenth and the early twentieth centuries. It stresses the way in which the British went to the continent in their search for origins or their pursuit of sources of purity and originality. This cult of the primitive took many forms; it involved a reassessment of medieval German and Italian art and offered new ways of interpreting Venetian painting; it opened up new readings of architectural history and the 'discovery' of the Romanesque; it generated a debate about the value of returning to religious subjects in art and it raised the question of the relationship between modern art and Byzantine art in the early twentieth century. J.B. Bullen's original study presents some exciting findings. Few critics have noticed how much in advance of his time was Coleridge's passion for medieval art; Ruskin's debt in the "Stones of Venice" to Victor Hugo's "Notre Dame de Paris" has hardly been noted, and Browning's involvement with the debate on the morality of Christian art is explored more extensively than previously.; Three chapters are devoted to the role of British criticism in identifying the Romanesque style in architecture and differentiating it from the Gothic. They trace the concept as it arose in criticism at the beginning of the nineteenth century; its employment in the remarkable buildings of Edmund Sharpe and Sara Losh and the way in which it reached a climax in Waterhouse's enigmatic choice of Romanesque for the Natural History Museum in London. The collection concludes with two continental episodes from the history of modernism. One is the explosive British reaction to the primitivism of Gauguin; the other involves the identifying of one of the characters in D.H. Lawrence's novel "Women in Love". Curious evidence suggests that the malevolent figure of Loerke was based on a German sculptor whom Lawrence met in Italy before the First World War
Bibliography Includes bibliographical references (pages 264-282) and index
Notes English
Print version record
Subject Art, European -- 19th century -- Public opinion
Art, European -- 20th century -- Public opinion
Art criticism -- Great Britain -- History -- 19th century
Art criticism -- Great Britain -- History -- 20th century
Art, British -- European influences
Art, Romanesque -- Influence
ART -- European.
Art criticism
Art, Romanesque -- Influence
Great Britain
Genre/Form History
Form Electronic book
ISBN 1423770781
9781423770787
128075656X
9781280756566
9786610756568
6610756562
9780198186915
0198186916
0191541907
9780191541902