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Making Ideas Visible in the Eighteenth Century [Kõva köide]

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This volume considers how ideas were made visible through the making of art and visual experience occasioned by reception during the long eighteenth century. The event that gave rise to the collection was the 15th David Nochol Smith Seminar in Eighteenth-Century Studies, which launched a new Australian and New Zealand Society of Eighteenth-Century Studies. Two strands of interest are explored by the individual authors. The first four essays work with ideas about material objects and identity formation, suggesting how the artist's physical environment contributes to the sense of self, as a practicing artist or artisan, as an individual patron or collector, or as a woman or religious outsider. The last four essays address the intellectual work that can be expressed through or performed by objects. Through a consideration of the material formation of concepts, this book explores questions that are implicated by the need to see ideas in painted, sculpted, illustrated, and designed forms. In doing so, it introduces new visual materials and novel conceptual models into traditional accounts of the intellectual history of the Enlightenment.

During the Enlightenment, there was a tension between word and image that eighteenth-century artists increasingly manipulated in their assertion of the visual independence of ideas. This book considers how making ideas visible assisted in the aesthetic understanding of intellectual processes engaged by works of art.

Arvustused

"Making Ideas Visible is an important collection that will appeal to scholars from a variety of disciplines. Those teaching early-modern literature and history will find useful representations of ideas that are often less accessible in printed texts. Many of the books images will find a home in my instructional materials, and the authors insightful interpretations will inform our class discussions. Milam and Parsons should be congratulated for selecting such keen essays, each of which is handsomely produced and carefully documented." - Christopher D. Johnson, Francis Marion University (The Eighteenth-Century Intelligencer)

Acknowledgements vii
List of Illustrations
ix
Introduction: The Potential Visibility of Ideas in Enlightenment Art and Aesthetics 1(10)
Jennifer Milam
Nicola Parsons
Chapter 1 A Good Address: Living at the Louvre in the Eighteenth Century
11(20)
David Maskill
Chapter 2 Inventing Artifice: Francois Boucher's Collection at the Louvre
31(28)
Jessica Priebe
Chapter 3 Continental Porcelain Made in England: The Case of the Chelsea Porcelain Factory
59(20)
Matthew Martin
Chapter 4 Planting Cosmopolitan Ideals: Thomas Jefferson's Poplar Forest
79(32)
Jennifer Milam
Chapter 5 Growing Old in Public in Eighteenth-Century France: Marie-Therese Geoffrin and Marie Leszczynska
111(24)
Jessica L. Fripp
Chapter 6 French Funerary Monuments of the Ancien Regime as the Product of Individual Artistic Solutions
135(24)
Wiebke Windorf
Chapter 7 Meeting the Locals: Mythical Images of the Indigenous Other in the Eighteenth and Nineteenth Centuries
159(26)
Melanie Cooper
Chapter 8 Infernal Machines: Designing the Bomb Vessel as Transnational Technology
185(24)
Jennifer Ferng
Notes on Contributors 209(4)
Index 213
JENNIFER MILAM is the Pro Vice Chancellor (Academic Excellence) at the University of Newcastle in Callaghan, Australia. Her books on rococo art include Historical Dictionary of Rococo Art, Fragonards Playful Paintings, and an edited collection Women, Art and the Politics of Identity in Eighteenth-Century Europe. 

NICOLA PARSONS is a senior lecturer in English at the University of Sydney in Australia. She is the author of Reading Gossip in Early Eighteenth-Century England.