Image for Art and the academy in the nineteenth century

Art and the academy in the nineteenth century

Part of the The Barber Institute's critical perspectives in art history series series
See all formats and editions

Academies functioned as the main venues for the promotion, display and teaching of art throughout the 19th century. 20th-century opinion has tended to maintain a consipicuous silence on their account, except for the strategic employment of "academicism" as a term of abuse.

The authors uncover the institutional structures and artistic practices of academies from London and Paris to Dusseldorf and Rio de Janeiro.

By situating the efforts of individual artists and academies within the context of a network of global proportions, new insights are gained into the ways in which institutions of art helped shape the 19th century's view of itself as an age of equipoise and civilization amidst the turmoil of rapid social and cultural change.

Read More
Title Unavailable: Out of Print
Product Details
Manchester University Press
0719054958 / 9780719054952
Boards
709.034
02/03/2000
England
English
x, 207p. : ill.
25 cm
postgraduate /research & professional /undergraduate Learn More