In this major reinterpretation of the Victorian Aesthetic Movement, Linda Dowling argues that such classic works of Victorian art writing as Ruskin's Stones of Venice or Morris's Lectures on Art or Wilde's Critic as Artist become wholly intelligible only within the larger ideological context of the Whig aesthetic tradition. Tracing the genealogy of Victorian Aestheticism back to the first great crisis of the Whig polity in the earlier eighteenth century, Dowling locates the source of the Victorians' utopian hopes for art in the "moral sense" theory of Anthony Ashley Cooper, third earl of Shaftesbury. Shaftesbury's theory of a universal moral sense, argues The Vulgarization of Art, became the transcendental basis for the new Whig polity that proposed itself as an alternative to older theories of natural law and divine right. It would then sustain the Victorians' hope that their own nightmare landscape of commercial modernity and mass taste might be transformed by a universal pleasure in art and beauty. The Vulgarization of Art goes on to explore the tragic consequences for the Aesthetic Movement when a repressed and irresolvable conflict between Shaftesbury's assumption of "aristocratic soul" and the Victorian ideal of "aesthetic democracy" repeatedly shatters the hopes of such writers as Ruskin, Morris, Pater, and Wilde for social transformation through the aesthetic sense.
Ed . E. T. Cook and Alexander Wedderburn . London : George Allen , 1903–12 . 14 : 5-39 . . “ Academy Notes , 1858 " in The Works of John Ruskin . 39 vols . Ed . E. T. Cook and Alexander Wedderburn . London : George Allen , 1903–12 .
William M. Sullivan, Reconstructing Public Philosophy, 156. Sullivan, Reconstructing Public Philosophy, 157. Thomas B. Farrell, Norms of Rhetorical Culture. Saggs comments that “the best archaeological evidence for the development of ...
... The Vulgarization of Art; Eagleton, The Ideology of the Aesthetic. 14. Dowling, The Vulgarization of Art. 15. Dowling, The Vulgarization of Art. 16. Thomas Greenwood, Museums and Art Galleries (London: Simpkin, Marshall and Co., 1888) ...
... Art Criticism (Boston: Houghton Mifflin, 1960), 34–35. 11. Linda Dowling, The Vulgarization of Art: The Victorians and Aesthetic Democracy (Charlottesville: University Press of Virginia, 1996), 4. 12. Dowling, The Vulgarization of Art ...
Keen, Suzanne. Empathy and the Novel. Oxford University Press, 2007. Kelvin, Norman, ed. The Collected Letters of William Morris, 1889–1892. Vol. III. Princeton University Press, 1996. The Collected Letters of William Morris, 1893–1896.
... Painting for Money : The Visual Arts and the Public Sphere in Eighteenth - Century England ( New Haven : Yale University Press , 1993 ) . 8. Crary ( Techniques ) , Dowling ( The Vulgarization of Art ) , and Martin Meisel ( Realizations ...
and Redmond Barry as 'the nucleus of a future gallery of Victorian worthies connected with the legal profession', described Barry's representation: There is much literature on judicial portraiture, and in this.
See Morris's unpublished letter in the George Maciunas alphabetical files marked “ Misc , ” Archiv Hanns Sohm , Stattsgalerie , Stuttgart . s . See Robert Morris , “ Notes on Sculpture , Part I , ” in Artforum 4 , no .
Providing a comprehensive interdisciplinary assessment, and with a particular focus on expressions of tension and anxiety about modernity, this collection examines visual culture in nineteenth-century Europe as it attempted to...
Snooty Baronet has much in common with The Apes of God for here again the literary Bohemia of London is Lewis's target , but the picture he gives of it is more sordid and never comic . Snooty Baronet , Sir Michael Kell - Imrie , is a ...