Spaces of Connoisseurship: Judging Old Masters at Agnew’s and the National Gallery, c.1874-1916: Studies in the History of Collecting & Art Markets, cartea 15
Autor Alison Clarkeen Limba Engleză Hardback – 21 aug 2022
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Specificații
ISBN-13: 9789004518896
ISBN-10: 9004518894
Dimensiuni: 155 x 235 mm
Greutate: 0 kg
Editura: Brill
Colecția Brill
Seria Studies in the History of Collecting & Art Markets
ISBN-10: 9004518894
Dimensiuni: 155 x 235 mm
Greutate: 0 kg
Editura: Brill
Colecția Brill
Seria Studies in the History of Collecting & Art Markets
Notă biografică
Alison Clarke, Ph.D. (2018), University of Liverpool/National Gallery, London, is Special Projects Manager at Newcastle University. Her work has appeared in Getty Research Journal, Victorian Network, and ‘Money in the Air’: Art Dealers and the Transatlantic Market, 1880-1930 (Getty, forthcoming).
Cuprins
List of Illustrations
Introduction
1 On Institutions, Subjects and Dates
2 On Sources and a Spatial Methodology
1 What? The Criteria of Connoisseurship
1 Avoiding the ‘Limbo of Mistaken Acquisitions’: Attribution
2 ‘Much Painted on & Spoilt by Some Vandal’: Condition and Restoration
3 A ‘Very Dull’ Velázquez: Beauty and Aesthetics
4 Selecting Typical Specimens: Representativeness and Importance
5 ‘Should Think Unsaleable’: Negotiating Customer Appeal
2 Where? Examining Paintings at Home and Abroad
1 Beyond Texts: Moving on from Dematerialised Connoisseurship
2 Mobility: Artworks and Connoisseurs
3 The Spaces of Connoisseurship
4 Spatial Factors Affecting Connoisseurship
5 The Chronology of Connoisseurship
3 How? The Supremacy of Visual Connoisseurship
1 Categorisation and Comparison: Viewing Artworks in Person
2 ‘My Treacherous Memory’: Comparison from Reproductions
3 Visual Experience and the ‘Mental Canon’
4 Provenance: Archives and Libraries as Alternative Spaces of Connoisseurship?
5 A Lack of Evidence for Technical Testing
6 Connoisseurship and a Model for Perceptual Expertise
4 The National Gallery and Display
1 Public Ownership, Public Criticism
2 The Trafalgar Square Building and its Extensions
3 Walking through Art History: Rooms, Schools, Chronology and Hang
4 The Aesthetics of Display: Décor and Lighting
5 ‘Where Can These Pictures Be Hung?’ Disruptions to Display
5 Agnew’s and Display
1 Private Ownership, Public Reputation
2 ‘Lent from Various Great Houses’: Special Exhibitions
Conclusion and Final Thoughts
1 A Cautionary Tale
Appendix
Bibliography
Primary Sources
Secondary Sources
Index
Introduction
1 On Institutions, Subjects and Dates
2 On Sources and a Spatial Methodology
Section I: Connoisseurship and Acquisition: The What, Where and How
1 What? The Criteria of Connoisseurship
1 Avoiding the ‘Limbo of Mistaken Acquisitions’: Attribution
2 ‘Much Painted on & Spoilt by Some Vandal’: Condition and Restoration
3 A ‘Very Dull’ Velázquez: Beauty and Aesthetics
4 Selecting Typical Specimens: Representativeness and Importance
5 ‘Should Think Unsaleable’: Negotiating Customer Appeal
2 Where? Examining Paintings at Home and Abroad
1 Beyond Texts: Moving on from Dematerialised Connoisseurship
2 Mobility: Artworks and Connoisseurs
3 The Spaces of Connoisseurship
4 Spatial Factors Affecting Connoisseurship
5 The Chronology of Connoisseurship
3 How? The Supremacy of Visual Connoisseurship
1 Categorisation and Comparison: Viewing Artworks in Person
2 ‘My Treacherous Memory’: Comparison from Reproductions
3 Visual Experience and the ‘Mental Canon’
4 Provenance: Archives and Libraries as Alternative Spaces of Connoisseurship?
5 A Lack of Evidence for Technical Testing
6 Connoisseurship and a Model for Perceptual Expertise
Section II: Connoisseurship and Display: Exhibiting Expertise
4 The National Gallery and Display
1 Public Ownership, Public Criticism
2 The Trafalgar Square Building and its Extensions
3 Walking through Art History: Rooms, Schools, Chronology and Hang
4 The Aesthetics of Display: Décor and Lighting
5 ‘Where Can These Pictures Be Hung?’ Disruptions to Display
5 Agnew’s and Display
1 Private Ownership, Public Reputation
2 ‘Lent from Various Great Houses’: Special Exhibitions
Conclusion and Final Thoughts
1 A Cautionary Tale
Appendix
Bibliography
Primary Sources
Secondary Sources
Index