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The Grosvenor Gallery Exhibitions : Change and Continuity in the Victorian Art World

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The Grosvenor Gallery was the most progressive exhibition space of the Victorian age.

The paintings and works of art shown there - by Burne-Jones, Watts, Whistler and a host of other figures associated with the aesthetic movement - challenged artistic convention and were the cause of virulent debate about the means and purpose of modern art, while the very existence of a gallery which attracted so much fashionable attention and which lent such great prestige to the artists who exhibited there served to overthrow the stultifying influence of the contemporary Royal Academy.

Christopher Newall's book tells the story of the rise and fall of the Grosvenor Gallery, and his invaluable index of exhibitors, compiled from the now very rare original catalogues, allows the reader to discover which artists showed which works and what they were during the fourteen years of the Grosvenor's summer exhibitions.

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Product Details
Cambridge University Press
0521612128 / 9780521612128
Paperback / softback
11/11/2004
United Kingdom
196 pages, 12 Halftones, unspecified
190 x 242 mm, 363 grams
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