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ISBN: HB: 9780300170504

Yale University Press

May 2011

320 pp.

29x25 cm

100 black&white illus., 50 colour illus.

HB:
£45,00
QTY:

Categories:

Imperial Landscapes

Britain's Global Visual Culture, 1745-1820

In response to conquests in mid-18th-century wars, Britons developed a keen interest in how their colonies actually looked. Artistic representations of these faraway places, claiming topographic accuracy from being "drawn on the spot", became increasingly frequent as the British Empire extended its reach during and after the Seven Years' War. This is the first book to examine the country's early imperial landscape art from a broad comparative perspective. Chapters on the West Indies, Canada, the United States, the Pacific, Australia, and India show how British artists linked colonial territories with their homeland. This is both a ravishingly beautiful art book and an historical analysis of how British visual culture entwined with the politics of colonization.

About the Author

John E. Crowley is Professor Emeritus of History at Dalhousie University in Halifax, Nova Scotia. His books include "The Invention of Comfort: Sensibilities" and "Design in Early Modern Britain and Early America".

Reviews

"Attractively produced and lavishly illustrated... an interesting and visually rewarding volume" – Ian Robertson, British Art Journal

"A sumptuous volume" – Paul Johnson, The Spectator