Art in Theory (1648-1815) provides a wide-ranging and comprehensive collection of documents on the theory of art from the founding of the French ...
Continue Reading →Described by Kenneth Clark as ‘one of the most brilliant books of art criticism that I have ever read’, Art and Illusion is ...
Continue Reading →Although the work of Pierre Francastel (1900-1970) has long carried the label “sociology of art,” it bears little resemblance to anything conventionally sociological. ...
Continue Reading →This magisterial study of Gothic architecture traces the meaning and development of the Gothic style through medieval churches across Europe. Ranging geographically from ...
Continue Reading →Art historians have in the past narrowly defined primitivism, limiting their inquiry to examples of direct stylistic borrowing from African, Oceanic, or Native ...
Continue Reading →The rise and fall of identical copies: digital technologies and form-making from mass customization to mass collaboration. Digital technologies have changed architecture– the ...
Continue Reading →Before the Renaissance and Reformation, holy images were treated not as “art” but as objects of veneration which possessed the tangible presence of ...
Continue Reading →After 1500, as Catholic Europe fragmented into warring sects, evidence of a pagan past came newly into view, and travelers to distant places ...
Continue Reading →This book will have at least one feature in common with all those already published on Mannerism; it will appear to describe something ...
Continue Reading →Artist, architect, poet and philosopher, Leon Battista Alberti revolutionized the history of art with his theories of perspective in On Painting (1435). Inspired ...
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