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John Ruskin, J.M.W. Turner and the Art of Water

Carmen Casaliggi

John Ruskin, J.M.W. Turner and the Art of Water
John Ruskin, J.M.W. Turner and the Art of Water

John Ruskin, J.M.W. Turner and the Art of Water

Carmen Casaliggi

Paperback | Engels
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€ 44,95
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Omschrijving

'Carmen Casaliggi's long-considered study of Ruskin's fascination with these "spirited sea-pieces", from Dover and Ramsgate to Plymouth and Whitby, represents a major addition to the literature on a great artist and a great writer.'Stephen Wildman,Emeritus Professor of History of Art and retired Director of the Ruskin Library and Research Centre, Lancaster University'Ruskin's Harbours of England has not received the sort of scholarly attention given to his better-known books, yet as an expression of some of his most deeply-held interests and principles it deserves and repays close attention. In her new book, the product of extensive research and long immersion in her subject, Carmen Casaliggi has given The Harbours of England the full-length study it deserves, considering what it can tell us about Ruskin's relationship with Turner, his love of water and the the natural world, and the ways in which ideas about water figured in the broader aesthetic, scientific, and philosophical debates of the period. Casaliggi also demonstrates the ways in which Harbours influenced Modern Painters and The Stones of Venice, in which Ruskin took up and developed many of its themes and ideas.Casaliggi's important book invites us to broaden our understanding of both Ruskin and Turner, and offers new insights into their significance, both to one another and to the period.'Sara Atwood,Instructor of English Literature, Portland State University and Pacific Northwest College of Art, USA'In her beautifully illustrated, enthralling study, Carmen Casaliggi takes readers on an exciting search for the significance of water in the work of two nineteenth-century master painters and art theorists: J.M.W. Turner and John Ruskin. Framed by tensions between natural landscape and its technological and scientific representations, Casaliggi adopts a refreshing approach to an atmospheric, though at times highly controversial theme. Through this book, water emerges as much more than a symbol of God's benevolence, as posited optimistically by Ruskin. Nor is wateriness an ingenious metonym of natural waterways only. The Janus-faced aquatic theme actually indexes maritime landscapes, shipping, commerce, thus becoming a sign with potent nationalistic, even colonial overcodings. As the site of invigorating encounters, Turner's and Ruskin's water is an epistemic battleground where past and present, influence and originality, nature and science converge and collide. Casaliggi's book also includes beautiful illustrations exploring important milestones in the relationship between Turner, Ruskin and water, with particular reference to The Harbours of England (1856). A study that convincingly assesses and reshapes the multi-layered, intermedia discourse of water, John Ruskin, J.M.W. Turner and the Art of Water will be especially welcomed by scholars and students working in post-Romantic British culture, art writing, and the fine arts.'Francesca Saggini,Marie S. Curie Fellow, University of Edinburgh and Professor in English Literature, Università della Tuscia

'Carmen Casaliggi's long-considered study of Ruskin's fascination with these "spirited sea-pieces", from Dover and Ramsgate to Plymouth and Whitby, represents a major addition to the literature on a great artist and a great writer.'Stephen Wildman,Emeritus Professor of History of Art and retired Director of the Ruskin Library and Research Centre, Lancaster University'Ruskin's Harbours of England has not received the sort of scholarly attention given to his better-known books, yet as an expression of some of his most deeply-held interests and principles it deserves and repays close attention. In her new book, the product of extensive research and long immersion in her subject, Carmen Casaliggi has given The Harbours of England the full-length study it deserves, considering what it can tell us about Ruskin's relationship with Turner, his love of water and the the natural world, and the ways in which ideas about water figured in the broader aesthetic, scientific, and philosophical debates of the period. Casaliggi also demonstrates the ways in which Harbours influenced Modern Painters and The Stones of Venice, in which Ruskin took up and developed many of its themes and ideas.Casaliggi's important book invites us to broaden our understanding of both Ruskin and Turner, and offers new insights into their significance, both to one another and to the period.'Sara Atwood,Instructor of English Literature, Portland State University and Pacific Northwest College of Art, USA'In her beautifully illustrated, enthralling study, Carmen Casaliggi takes readers on an exciting search for the significance of water in the work of two nineteenth-century master painters and art theorists: J.M.W. Turner and John Ruskin. Framed by tensions between natural landscape and its technological and scientific representations, Casaliggi adopts a refreshing approach to an atmospheric, though at times highly controversial theme. Through this book, water emerges as much more than a symbol of God's benevolence, as posited optimistically by Ruskin. Nor is wateriness an ingenious metonym of natural waterways only. The Janus-faced aquatic theme actually indexes maritime landscapes, shipping, commerce, thus becoming a sign with potent nationalistic, even colonial overcodings. As the site of invigorating encounters, Turner's and Ruskin's water is an epistemic battleground where past and present, influence and originality, nature and science converge and collide. Casaliggi's book also includes beautiful illustrations exploring important milestones in the relationship between Turner, Ruskin and water, with particular reference to The Harbours of England (1856). A study that convincingly assesses and reshapes the multi-layered, intermedia discourse of water, John Ruskin, J.M.W. Turner and the Art of Water will be especially welcomed by scholars and students working in post-Romantic British culture, art writing, and the fine arts.'Francesca Saggini,Marie S. Curie Fellow, University of Edinburgh and Professor in English Literature, Università della Tuscia

Carmen Casaliggi is Reader in English at Cardiff Metropolitan University. Her research interests include nineteenth-century literature and art, the relationship between British and European Romanticism, Romantic literary circles, and the environmental humanities. She has published widely on these topics and her books include Ruskin in Perspective: Contemporary Essays (co-edited with Paul March-Russell, 2007); Legacies of Romanticism: Literature, Culture, Aesthetics (co-edited with Paul March-Russell, 2012); Romanticism: A Literary and Cultural History (with Porscha Fermanis, 2016); and Using Interactive Digital Narrative in Science and Health Education (with Rebecca L. Skains, 2021).

Specificaties

  • Uitgever
    Cambridge Scholars Publishing
  • Verschenen
    feb. 2024
  • Bladzijden
    219
  • Genre
    Literatuurstudies: ca. 1800 tot ca. 1900
  • Afmetingen
    212 x 148 mm
  • EAN
    9781036400637
  • Paperback
    Paperback
  • Taal
    Engels

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