Thomas Jefferson on Taste and the Fine Arts

Thomas Jefferson on Taste and the Fine Arts
Author: M. Andrew Holowchak
Publisher: Vernon Press
Total Pages: 217
Release: 2022-09-20
Genre: History
ISBN: 1648895298

Jefferson tended to classify the books of his libraries under the Baconian headings of memory, reason, and imagination, which corresponded to history, philosophy, and the fine arts. Thus, education in the Fine Arts, which Jefferson listed as eight, was considered an indispensible part of the life of an educated person—especially a Virginian. An educated person needed knowledge of architecture, gardening, painting, sculpture, rhetoric, belle lettres, poetry music, and criticism, considered as a sort of meta-art. Knowledge of such arts was indispensible because each person, thought Jefferson, was equipped with a faculty of taste as well as ratiocination and a moral-sense faculty—each of which required cultivation for human thriving. An uncultivated imagination would severely impair ratiocination and moral sensitivity. This book is the first book-length attempt to flesh out and critically assess Jefferson’s views on taste and the Fine Arts. It is a must read for any serious biographer of Jefferson.

Jefferson and Monticello

Jefferson and Monticello
Author: Jack Mclaughlin
Publisher: Macmillan
Total Pages: 496
Release: 1990-10-15
Genre: Biography & Autobiography
ISBN: 9780805014631

This book, a National Book Award nominee in 1988, is the life of Thomas Jefferson as seen through the prism of his love affair with Monticello. With a sure command of sources and skilled intuituve understanding of Jefferson, McLaughlin crafts and uncommon portrait of this exceptional man--and of daily life in COlonial and Federal America. Line drawings and black-and-white photographs.