Ruskin and the Art of the Beholder

Ruskin and the Art of the Beholder
Author: Elizabeth K. Helsinger
Publisher:
Total Pages: 384
Release: 1982
Genre: Art
ISBN:

"This book seems to give me eyes," wrote Charlotte Brontë of Ruskin's Modern Painters. Elizabeth Helsinger here explores theprofound changes Ruskin induced in theway nineteenth-century viewers looked atnature and at art. Helsinger argues that Ruskin transformedthe artist- or poet-oriented aesthetics ofromanticism into a beholder- or reader-oriented criticism. Combining critical attention to Ruskin's prose with her ownwide-ranging scholarship, Helsinger placesRuskin's perceptual reforms within previously unexplored intellectual and culturalcontexts. She connects his thought withWordsworth's poetry, Turner's landscapeart, and Carlyle's history, and shows theeffect on his ideas of romantic literary andart criticism, associationist psychology, historicism, contemporary travel art andliterature, and Victorian philology. This illuminating study of Ruskin's criticism should be welcomed by students ofnineteenth-century intellectual, literary,and art history.

Ruskin

Ruskin
Author: Sheila Emerson
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Total Pages: 310
Release: 1993-12-02
Genre: Literary Criticism
ISBN: 0521418070

A remarkable study of how early literary, familial, sexual, and social experiences affect artistic identity.

Ruskin's Artists

Ruskin's Artists
Author: Robert Hewison
Publisher: Routledge
Total Pages: 253
Release: 2017-11-22
Genre: Art
ISBN: 1351788337

This was first published in 2000: A study of John Ruskin's engagement with art and architecture as a critic, a patron and a teacher. It offers insights into both his writings and the visual economy of the Victorian world. Each essay examines Ruskin's relationship with an individual artist or a distinct aspect of art practice. J.M.W. Turner, D.G. Rossetti, W. Holman Hunt and E. Burne-Jones are among those artists discussed whose personal relationships with Ruskin affected his critical writing. Ruskin's attitude to women artists and his approach to the teaching of art are given special attention.

The Cambridge Companion to John Ruskin

The Cambridge Companion to John Ruskin
Author: Francis O'Gorman
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Total Pages: 319
Release: 2015-10-26
Genre: Art
ISBN: 1107054893

Draws together leading experts from a wide range of disciplines to analyse the life and work of John Ruskin (1819-1900).

The Genius of John Ruskin

The Genius of John Ruskin
Author: John Ruskin
Publisher: University of Virginia Press
Total Pages: 572
Release: 1997
Genre: Literary Collections
ISBN: 9780813917894

This volume powerfully demonstrates the range and inexhaustible vitality of Ruskin's prose and will once again become an indispensable reference for Victorianists from a range of disciplines.

Ruskin's Culture Wars

Ruskin's Culture Wars
Author: Judith Stoddart
Publisher: University of Virginia Press
Total Pages: 220
Release: 1998
Genre: Art
ISBN: 9780813918068

In Ruskin's Culture Wars, Judith Stoddart provides the first sustained modern critical reading of Fors Clavigera, placing this classic work in the context of its Victorian contemporaries: art journals, liberal and working-class periodicals, and popular criticism. In recreating the intellectual climate, she demonstrates the sense of cultural crisis and change evident at the time. Rebelling against the tendency to treat Ruskin's letters as the prose lyric of a damaged psyche, Stoddart shows how the cumulative text of Fors Clavigera not only records but revises and redirects the preoccupations of his period. He was an integral part of Victorian discussions of literary tradition and of the roles of democracy and nationality in late-nineteenth-century Europe.

ASense of Shock

ASense of Shock
Author: Adam Parkes
Publisher: Oxford University Press
Total Pages: 304
Release: 2011-08-19
Genre: Literary Criticism
ISBN: 0190452498

What does modern British and Irish literature have to do with French impressionist painting? And what does Henry James have to do with the legal dispute between John Ruskin and J.M.W. Whistler? What links Walter Pater with Conrad's portrait of a genocidal maniac in Heart of Darkness? Or George Moore with Irish nationalism, Virginia Woolf with modern distraction, and Ford Madox Ford with the Great Depression? Adam Parkes argues that we must answer such questions if we are to appreciate the full impact of impressionist aesthetics on modern British and Irish writers. Complicating previous accounts of the influence of painting and philosophy on literary impressionism, A Sense of Shock highlights the role of politics, uncovering new and deeper linkages. In the hands of such practitioners as Conrad, Ford, James, Moore, Pater, and Woolf, literary impressionism was shaped by its engagement with important social issues and political events that defined the modern age. As Parkes demonstrates, the formal and stylistic practices that distinguish impressionist writing were the result of dynamic and often provocative interactions between aesthetic and historical factors. Parkes ultimately suggests that it was through this incendiary combination of aesthetics and history that impressionist writing forced significant change on the literary culture of its time. A Sense of Shock will appeal to students and scholars of nineteenth- and twentieth-century literature, as well as the growing readership for books that explore problems of literary history and interdisciplinarity.

The Picturesque

The Picturesque
Author: John Macarthur
Publisher: Routledge
Total Pages: 314
Release: 2007
Genre: Architecture
ISBN: 1844721418

John Macarthur presents the eighteenth century idea of the picturesque – when it was a risky term concerned with a refined taste for everyday things, such as the hovels of the labouring poor – in the light of its reception and effects in modern culture.