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Back to topColonization, Wilderness, and Spaces Between: Nineteenth-Century Landscape Painting in Australia and the United States (Paperback)
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Description
This volume of essays frames a comparative history of landscape painting in Australia and the United States through recent considerations of the Anthropocene, arguing that careful and deep analysis of specific nineteenth-century artworks reveals issues of environmental concern both past and present. Carefully drawn from two symposia held at the Art Gallery of Western Australia in Perth in 2016 and at the Ian Potter Museum of Art, University of Melbourne the following year, the volume includes eight essays and a conversation between artists. Colonization, Wilderness, and Spaces Between brings together the fresh insights of scholars and artists from Australia, the United Kingdom, and the United States and provides a resource for thinking critically about the historical, imperial, and environmental information that can be gleaned from looking closely at landscape paintings.
About the Author
Richard Read is emeritus professor of art history and senior honorary research fellow at the University of Western Australia. He is the author of Art and Its Discontents: the Early Life of Adrian Stokes.
Kenneth Haltman is H. Russell Pitman Professor of art history at the University of Oklahoma. He has published critical translations of works by French phenomenologist Gaston Bachelard, and his publications include Looking Close and Seeing Far: Samuel Seymour, Titian Ramsay Peale, and the Art of the Long Expedition, 1818–1823; Titian Peale’s Butterflies of North America; and a critical edition and translation from the French of The Evolution of Taste in American Collecting.
Peter John Brownlee is curator at the Terra Foundation for American Art.
Rachael Z. DeLue is associate professor of art history at Princeton University.
Kenneth Haltman is H. Russell Pitman Professor of art history at the University of Oklahoma. He has published critical translations of works by French phenomenologist Gaston Bachelard, and his publications include Looking Close and Seeing Far: Samuel Seymour, Titian Ramsay Peale, and the Art of the Long Expedition, 1818–1823; Titian Peale’s Butterflies of North America; and a critical edition and translation from the French of The Evolution of Taste in American Collecting.
Richard Read is emeritus professor of art history and senior honorary research fellow at the University of Western Australia. He is the author of Art and Its Discontents: the Early Life of Adrian Stokes.
Peter John Brownlee is curator at the Terra Foundation for American Art.