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British School of Sculpture, c.1760-1832 [Pehme köide]

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The British School of Sculpture, c. 1760

1832

represents the first edited collection exploring one of the most significant moments in British art history, returning to centre stage a wide range of sculpture considered for the first time by some of the most important scholars in the field. Following a historical and historiographical introduction by the editors, situating British sculpture in relation to key events and developments in the period, and the broader scholarship on British art more generally in the period and beyond, the book contains nine wide-ranging case studies that consider the place of antique and modern sculpture in British country houses in the period, monuments to heroes of commerce and the Napoleonic Wars, the key debates fought around ideal sculpture at the Royal Academy, the reception of British sculpture across Europe, the reception of Hindu sculpture deriving from India in Britain, and the relationship of sculpture to emerging industrial markets, both at home and abroad. Challenging characterisations of the period as 'neoclassical', the volume reveals British sculpture to be a much more eclectic and various field of endeavour, both in service of the state and challenging it, and open to sources ranging from the newly arrived Parthenon Frieze to contemporary print culture.

List of illustrations
ix
Notes on contributors xiii
Acknowledgements xv
1 Introduction: Sculpture Victorious; or, the British School, c. 1760--1832?
1(20)
Jason Edwards
2 Introduction: The British School of Sculpture -- a case study
21(13)
Sarah Burnage
3 Sculpture and the forming of national tastes in the middle of the eighteenth century
34(20)
Joan Coutu
4 Extracting the meaning of a pile of pancakes: An analysis of Nicholas Read's monument to Admiral Tyrrel (1766--70)
54(25)
Matthew Craske
5 `Delighting the common people': John Bacon Senior's monuments to the Earl of Chatham (1778--84)
79(24)
Sarah Burnage
6 Artistic labour and cosmopolitan sociability: British sculptors in accounts from late-eighteenth-century visitors to Rome
103(23)
Tomas Macsotay
7 Before Rome: John Gibson and the British School of Art
126(20)
Roberto C. Ferrari
8 `The Chatterton of sculpture': Thomas Procter and the martyrology of the British School
146(17)
Martin Myrone
9 Smoke and marble: Thomas Banks' monument to Captain George Blagdon Westcott
163(25)
Eleanor Hughes
10 John Charles Felix Rossi's Cornwallis monument (1807--11) and the colonial-cosmopolitanism of the British School
188(22)
Jason Edwards
11 Cunningham, Chantrey, and the British School of Sculpture
210(23)
M. G. Sullivan
Bibliography 233(24)
Index 257
Sarah Burnage is an independent art historian and curator.





Jason Edwards is Professor of Art History at the University of York.