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ISBN: HB: 9780300208320

Yale University Press

July 2015

272 pp.

25.4x20.3 cm

60 colour illus., 75 black&white illus.

HB:
£55,00
QTY:

Categories:

Realism in the Age of Impressionism

Painting and the Politics of Time

The late 1870s and early 1880s were watershed years in the history of French painting. As outgoing economic and social structures were being replaced by a capitalist, measured time, Impressionist artists sought to create works that could be perceived in an instant, capturing the sensations of rapidly transforming modern life. Yet a generation of artists pushed back against these changes, spearheading a short-lived revival of the Realist practices that had dominated at mid-century and advocating slowness in practice, subject matter, and beholding. In this illuminating book, Marnin Young looks closely at five works by Jules Bastien-Lepage, Gustave Caillebotte, Alfred-Philippe Roll, Jean-Francois Raffaelli, and James Ensor, artists who shared a concern with painting and temporality that is all but forgotten today, having been eclipsed by the ideals of Impressionism. Young's highly original study situates later Realism for the first time within the larger social, political, and economic framework and argues for its centrality in understanding the development of modern art.

About the Author

Marnin Young is associate professor of art history at Stern College for Women, Yeshiva University.

Reviews

"Young's total saturation in, and mastery of, the extremely rich body of contemporary art criticism enables him to recreate, to a remarkable degree, the recep-tion of his chosen paintings by the most informed and sophisticated viewers of the time. The richness of 19th-century French art criticism is a gift to the historian, but only a handful of scholars have made the most of it; T. J. Clark, Martha Ward, Marc Gotlieb, and Stephen Bann come at once to mind, and Young in this book joins their rather exclusive club" – Michael Fried, Johns Hopkins University

"What emerges is a very unusual bringing together of what is usually dealt with separately, by those dedicated to different methodological frameworks: a Marxist-inspired social history of art as exemplified in the work of T.J. Clark, versus a Friedian phenomenology of "absorption and theatricality", and their different ways of combining an address to both form and content, facture and iconography. Thus Marnin Young's text manages to nuance and complicate very usefully all the existing narratives of this period of 'avant-garde' art as well as the standard divisions in art historical methodology associated with it" – Carol Armstrong, Yale University