Acknowledgements.
A Note on the Presentation and Editing of Texts.
General Introduction.
Part I: Feeling and Nature:.
1. Originality and Genius.
2. Responses to Nature.
Part II: The Demands of the Present:.
3. Utility and Revolution.
4. Art and Nature Moralised.
5. Systems and Techniques.
6. The Individual in the Present.
Part III: Modernity and Bourgeois Life:.
7. Modern Conditions.
8. Realism and Naturalism.
9. Morals and Standards.
10. The Conditions of Art.
Part IV: Temperaments and Techniques:.
11. Effects and Impressions.
12. Photography as an Art.
13. Science and Method.
Part V: Aesthetics and Historical Awareness:.
14. Empathy and the Problem of Form.
15. Cultural Criticism.
16. The Independence of Art.
Part VI: The Idea of Modern Art:.
17. Modernist Themes: Paris and Beyond.
18. Expression and Colour.
19. Symbolism.
Bibliography.
Copyright Acknowledgements.
Index.
Charles Harrison is Professor of History and Theory of Art
at the Open University. He is author of Essays on Art & Language
(1991, 2001), Modernism (1997), Conceptual Art and Painting (2001)
and Painting the Difference (2005).
Paul Wood is Senior Lecturer in Art History at the Open
University. He is the author of Conceptual Art (2002) and has
contributed to various publications in the history of modern
art.
Jason Gaiger is Lecturer in Art History at the Open University. He is the editor and translator of Herder’s Sculpture: Some Observations on Shape and Form from Pygmalion’s Creative Dream (2002) and has published widely in the field of art history and aesthetics.
‘… an enormous contribution to the field and a triumph of editorial
endeavour.’ Journal of Art & Design Education
"The volume provides the most wide-ranging and comprehensive
collection of documents ever assembled on nineteenth-century
theories of art. Like its highly successful companion volume Art in
Theory 1900-1990, it is edited by Charles Harrison and Paul Wood,
this time with an additional editor, Jason Gaiger. Its primary aim
is to provide students and teachers with the documentary material
for informed and up-to-date study. Its two hundred and sixty texts,
clear organisation and considerable editorial content combine to
provide a vivid and indispensable introduction to the history of
the art of the period. The Anthology is also invaluable to anyone
interested in the wider cultural debates of the nineteenth century,
and in the development of modern aesthetic theories." Bollettino
Del Publications
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