Disrupting Schools - Transnational Art Education in the 19th Century

Edition en anglais

Note moyenne 
Eleonora Vratskidou - Disrupting Schools - Transnational Art Education in the 19th Century.
The category of the "national school", paramount for the emerging discipline of art history in the 19th century, tended to dismiss the crucial encounters,... Lire la suite
121,33 € Neuf
Sous réserve de l'éditeur
En librairie

Résumé

The category of the "national school", paramount for the emerging discipline of art history in the 19th century, tended to dismiss the crucial encounters, confrontations and exchanges prompted by the fact that artists commonly travelled abroad, especially for the purposes of education and training. The aim of this volume is to address the complexities of this under-researched phenomenon, shedding light on the motivations and impact of transnational art education on artists' careers, on the actors and educational institutions involved (e.g.
state-run academies, private schools or studios, museums, outdoor practices) and on the growing international networks connecting artists, patrons, collectors, dealers, critics and scholars. Even though the nation was a major category for historical actors of the period, it is essential to question the validity of the national framework as an analytical tool for current scholarship : our aim is therefore to propose a new reading of 19th-century art worlds based on the idea of circulations, entanglements and revised geographies.
In the 19th century the destinations and itineraries of art students were reshaped by changing artistic trends and reputations, as well as by larger economic and geopolitical transformations engendered by the formation of new nation states and the remapping of Empires. The more or less temporary expatriations and the experience of difference during the key-period of artistic training generated divergent individual responses to foreign artistic contexts.
Their responses were formed amidst persistent tensions between the elaboration of "national art" and the appeal to artistic values that crossed national boundaries. Examining both recurring patterns as well as individual examples, the contributors to the volume analyze career strategies that took advantage of resources labeled as "foreign" and explore the implications of an increasingly internationalized art market for the choices of aspiring artists.
Beyond the emphasis on the circulation of people/actors, specific attention is given to the transfers of teaching methods, techniques and art theoretical discourses between artistic centers. Contributions also take into consideration the more or less precarious living conditions of art students abroad, their modes of socialization and group formations, the experience of the city and participation in artistic and intellectual circles.

Caractéristiques

  • Date de parution
    31/05/2021
  • Editeur
  • ISBN
    978-2-503-57031-0
  • EAN
    9782503570310
  • Présentation
    Relié
  • Nb. de pages
    232 pages
  • Poids
    1.28 Kg
  • Dimensions
    21,6 cm × 28,0 cm × 0,0 cm

Avis libraires et clients

Avis audio

Écoutez ce qu'en disent nos libraires !

À propos de l'auteur

Biographie d'Eleonora Vratskidou

France Nerlich is Professor at the University in Tours. She has dedicated her work to the question of reception and artistic transfer in the 19th century. Eleonora Vratskidou is Visiting Professor at the Technische Universität Berlin and works on the transnational history of art academies in the 19th century.

Du même auteur

Vous aimerez aussi

Derniers produits consultés

Disrupting Schools - Transnational Art Education in the 19th Century est également présent dans les rayons