Painting Out of the Ordinary:
Modernity and the Art of Everday Life in Early Nineteenth-Century England
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- Price
- £45
- Series
- Paul Mellon Lectures
- Type
- Publicaton Date
- May 2008
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- Standard Number
- 9780300140613
- Distributor
- Yale University Press
- Specifications
- 288 pages
At the height of the Napoleonic Wars, a new generation of painters led by the precociously talented David Wilkie took London's art world by storm. Their novel approach to the depiction of everyday life marked the beginning a trajectory that links the art of the Age of Revolution with the postmodern culture of today.
What emerged from the imagery of Wilkie and other early 19th-century British genre painters—among them William Mulready, Edward Bird, and the controversial watercolorist Thomas Heaphy—was a sense that common people were increasingly bound up with the exceptional events of history, that traditional boundaries between country and city were melting away, and that a more regularized and dynamic present was everywhere encroaching upon the customary patterns of the past.
About the author
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Emeritus Professor of the History of Art at The Courtauld Institute of Art