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E-raamat: Colours of the Past in Victorian England

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As new, artificial dyes were created in the second half of the nineteenth century, a longing for faded, ancient hues emerged in artistic circles. This collection focuses on the complex reception of the colours of the past in the works of major Victorian writers and artists, exploring the multiple facets of their chromatic nostalgia.

The experience of colour underwent a significant change in the second half of the nineteenth century, as new coal tar-based synthetic dyes were devised for the expanding textile industry. These new, artificial colours were often despised in artistic circles who favoured ancient and more authentic forms of polychromy, whether antique, medieval, Renaissance or Japanese. However faded, ancient hues were embraced as rich, chromatic alternatives to the bleakness of industrial modernity, fostering fantasized recreations of an idealized past.
The interdisciplinary essays in this collection focus on the complex reception of the colours of the past in the works of major Victorian writers and artists. Drawing on close analyses of artworks and literary texts, the contributors to this volume explore the multiple facets of the chromatic nostalgia of the Victorians, as well as the contrast between ancient colouring practices and the new sciences and techniques of colour.

Arvustused

«Charlotte Ribeyrol has edited a wonderful collection of essays that deepens our appreciation of material culture and broadens our understanding of colour in the revolutionary nineteenth century.»

(Adam Lee, Journal of Pre-Raphaelite Studies 27/2018)





«Appealing to literary and art historical scholars alike, The Colours of the Past in Victorian England offers a new way of observing nineteenth-century visual culture by revealing the visual and linguistic chromatic vibrancy of Victorian England.»

(Sarah Hook, BAVS Newsletter 18.1 2018)

List of Figures
vii
Acknowledgements xiii
Introduction 1(16)
Charlotte Ribeyrol
PART I `Faded by exposure': The Temporality of Colour
17(78)
1 `A magic web with colours gay': W.H. Hunt's Chromatic Nostalgia
19(28)
Charlotte Ribeyrol
Philippe Walter
2 Whistler and Whiteness
47(24)
Caroline Arscott
3 Symphonies in Haze and Blue: Lafcadio Hearn and the Colours of Japan
71(24)
Stefano Evangelista
PART II `Chromatic deviations': `Foreignizing' Colour
95(66)
4 The Orient in Chromolithography: Owen Jones and the Colours of Islamic Art
97(28)
Isabelle Gadoin
5 Colour and its Reconstruction in the Nineteenth-Century Rediscovery of Assyrian Art
125(36)
Michael Seymour
PART III `The violet shades, the hard cobalt': Material and Abstract Colours
161(96)
6 `Like fragments of the milky sky itself: The Late Nineteenth-Century Revival of Luca della Robbia's Coloured Terracottas
163(20)
Lene Østermark-Johansen
7 `Popularity' in Blue
183(22)
Marc Poree
8 Annie Besant and Charles W. Leadbeater's `Key to the Meanings of Colours' in Thought-Forms (1901)
205(30)
Muriel Pecastaing-Boissiere
9 `White Alb and Scarlet Camail': The Colours of Catholicism in Fin-de-Siecle Literature
235(22)
Claire Masurel-Murray
Note on Contributors 257(6)
Index 263
Charlotte Ribeyrol is Associate Professor at the University of Paris-Sorbonne, a Marie Curie Fellow at the University of Oxford (20162018) and a member of the Institut Universitaire de France since 2015. Her main field of research is the influence of Ancient Greece on Victorian painting and literature, particularly in the works of A.C. Swinburne, J.A. Symonds and Walter Pater. Thanks to her interdisciplinary collaboration with chemists from the POLYRE programme (supported by Sorbonne Universities), she is now exploring the importance of the materiality of colour in the works of major Victorian writers and artists, notably William Morris.