Product details:
ISBN13: | 9781350186897 |
ISBN10: | 1350186899 |
Binding: | Paperback |
No. of pages: | pages |
Size: | 234x156 mm |
Language: | English |
Illustrations: | 43 colour and 46 bw illus |
678 |
Category:
Laugh Lines
Caricaturing Painting in Nineteenth-Century France
Publisher: Bloomsbury Visual Arts
Date of Publication: 11 July 2024
Number of Volumes: Paperback
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Long description:
This is the first book length study of Salon caricature, a widespread genre of press illustration that flourished in Paris in the second half of the 19th century. Salon caricature began with a few tentative lithographs in the 1840s and, within a few decades, no Parisian exhibition could open without appearing in warped, incisive, and hilarious miniature in the pages of the illustrated press.
Supported by ample primary sources, from Baudelaire and Champfleury, to Grand-Carteret and Duret, as well as archival material made available here for the first time, Laugh Lines explores not only 19th-century caricature but a larger history of reproductive image technologies, including photography, and their relation to painting during the period of modernist emergence.
In bringing to light this rich register of art criticism-in-pictures, Laugh Lines offers new material and methods for the study of 19th-century painting, modernism, and art historiography, notably repositioning Édouard Manet in relation to public laughter and comic press art. More generally, Langbein draws back the curtain on a robust culture of comedy around fine art and its reception in 19th-century France, one in which artists of every stripe, including the most sentimental or conservative, were ripe to be made hilarious.
Supported by ample primary sources, from Baudelaire and Champfleury, to Grand-Carteret and Duret, as well as archival material made available here for the first time, Laugh Lines explores not only 19th-century caricature but a larger history of reproductive image technologies, including photography, and their relation to painting during the period of modernist emergence.
In bringing to light this rich register of art criticism-in-pictures, Laugh Lines offers new material and methods for the study of 19th-century painting, modernism, and art historiography, notably repositioning Édouard Manet in relation to public laughter and comic press art. More generally, Langbein draws back the curtain on a robust culture of comedy around fine art and its reception in 19th-century France, one in which artists of every stripe, including the most sentimental or conservative, were ripe to be made hilarious.
Table of Contents:
Introduction
1. Comic Reproduction in July Monarchy Paris
2. Dueling and Doubling: The Antagonism of Salon Caricature (1843-1852)
3. Physiognomy and Salon Caricature's Comic Perception
4. Salon Caricature and Reproductive Etching: The Critical Picture in the Age of Photography
5. Gravity and Graphic Medium in Cham and Daumier
6. Caricature and Comic Spectacle at the Paris Salon (1852-1881)
7. Salon Caricature, Public Laughter and the Making of Manet
Index
1. Comic Reproduction in July Monarchy Paris
2. Dueling and Doubling: The Antagonism of Salon Caricature (1843-1852)
3. Physiognomy and Salon Caricature's Comic Perception
4. Salon Caricature and Reproductive Etching: The Critical Picture in the Age of Photography
5. Gravity and Graphic Medium in Cham and Daumier
6. Caricature and Comic Spectacle at the Paris Salon (1852-1881)
7. Salon Caricature, Public Laughter and the Making of Manet
Index