Thames & Hudson

 

 


FIVE CENTURIES OF BRITISH PAINTING
From Holbein to Hodgkin
Andrew Wilton

Although Britain has played a dominant role in European history, its schools of painting have not always been seen as contributing significantly to the great Continental tradition. In this new book, the eminent art historian Andrew Wilton provides an enlightening look at the glories and achievements of British art over the past five centuries.

He traces the story of British painting from its hesitant beginnings under the influence of Holbein through its maturity in the time of Hogarth and Reynolds, when it reflected a prosperous society with growing Imperial influence. He then explores the pioneering role of Constable and Turner in the revolutions of the Romantic period, and the enigmatic position of artists in Victorian England, when a stiff moral code came into conflict with the uncertainties of the age of Darwin. In the twentieth century, Wilton shows how the new ideas of Modernism were explored by distinctive personalities from the Bloomsbury Group to Francis Bacon and the School of London.

Andrew Wilton is uniquely qualified to tell this story. After working in the British Museum and in the Yale Center for British Art at New Haven, he was the founding Curator of the Turner Collection at the Tate Gallery in London, where he was subsequently Keeper of the Historic British Collection. He is now Keeper and Senior Research Fellow at Tate Britain. His many publications include British Watercolors 1750 to 1850 and Turner in His Time.

ISBN 0-500-20349-0 · 5 7/8" x 8 1/4" · 200 illustrations, 90 in color · 224 pages · ART

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