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Before becoming a poet, Charles Baudelaire was an art critic; and he made his literary début with the Salon de 1845. Its failure to find a receptive audience led him to write the groundbreaking Salon de 1846 with its pivotal chapter on colour, in which Baudelaire challenged fundamental critical concepts of art by insisting on colours complexity, expressivity and modernity. Through a close reading of his critical essays on art, this book examines how Baudelaires thoughts on colour developed throughout his life and sets them in the context of traditional views of colour. What effect did the new scientific theories of colour harmony, filtered through his conversations with Delacroix and other artists, have on Baudelaire? Why did he see Daumier as a colourist, but not Ingres? What made him turn his back on French art in 1859 and which artist changed his mind? Baudelaires interest in a highly personal form of colour symbolism is investigated, as well as the part that colour plays in developing his later, central idea of a creative and poetic imagination capable of translating all the arts.
Acknowledgements ix
List of Abbreviations
xi
Introduction 1(6)
Chapter 1 Colour Blindness: Perceptions of Colour before Baudelaire
7(40)
Chapter 2 Colour Vision: The Science of Seeing
47(42)
Chapter 3 Colour and Drawing: Resolving the Conflict?
89(44)
Chapter 4 Colour Symbolism: Art, Poetry and Music
133(40)
Chapter 5 Colour and Imagination: Translating the Dream
173(44)
Conclusion 217(6)
Bibliography 223(10)
Index 233
Ann Kennedy Smith is a graduate of Trinity College Dublin and wrote her doctoral thesis on Baudelaires art criticism at the University of Cambridge. She lives in Cambridge and works as a freelance editor and tutor for the Institute of Continuing Education at the University of Cambridge and the Workers Educational Association.