The Living Death of Antiquity - Fitzgerald, William; - Prospero Internet Bookshop

The Living Death of Antiquity: Neoclassical Aesthetics
 
Product details:

ISBN13:9780192893963
ISBN10:0192893963
Binding:Hardback
No. of pages:288 pages
Size:241x165x20 mm
Weight:624 g
Language:English
Illustrations: 15 colour and 27 black-and-white illustrations
498
Category:

The Living Death of Antiquity

Neoclassical Aesthetics
 
Publisher: OUP Oxford
Date of Publication:
 
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Short description:

The Living Death of Antiquity examines the historical development of a neoclassical aesthetic in visual art and sculpture centred on simplicity and grandeur. Fitzgerald describes its ideals and potential as well as its remaining significance in modern culture.

Long description:
The Living Death of Antiquity examines the idealization of an antiquity that exhibits, in the words of Johann Joachim Winckelmann, 'a noble simplicity and quiet grandeur'. Fitzgerald discusses the aesthetics of this strain of neoclassicism as manifested in a range of work in different media and periods, focusing on the late eighteenth and early nineteenth centuries. In the aftermath of Winckelmann's writing, John Flaxman's engraved scenes from the Iliad and the sculptors Antonio Canova and Bertel Thorvaldsen reinterpreted ancient prototypes or invented new ones. Earlier and later versions of this aesthetic in the ancient Greek Anacreontea, the French Parnassian poets and Erik Satie's Socrate, manifest its character in different media and periods. Looking with a sympathetic eye on the original aspirations of the neoclassical aesthetic and its forward-looking potential, Fitzgerald describes how it can tip over into the vacancy or kitsch through which a 'remaindered' antiquity lingers in our minds and environments. This book asks how the neoclassical value of simplicity serves to conjure up an epiphanic antiquity, and how whiteness, in both its literal and its metaphorical forms, acts as the 'logo' of neoclassical antiquity, and functions aesthetically in a variety of media. In the context of the waning of a neoclassically idealized antiquity, Fitzgerald describes the new contents produced by its asymptotic approach to meaninglessness, and how the antiquity that it imagined both is and is not with us.

William Fitzgerald's The Living Death of Antiquity is a striking title indeed...This collection of carousing Greek poems from across several centuries, it is claimed, inaugurates something of a tradition itself, advocating a 'timeless lifestyle of drinking, desiring, and singing'.
Table of Contents:
Introduction: Why Neoclassicism?
The Iliad Backtranslated: Alexander Pope and John Flaxman
Sculpture between the Graceful and the Heroic: Antonio Canova and Bertel Thorvaldsen
Voicing Antiquity: the Anacreontea and Charles Leconte de Lisle's Études Latines
Modernism, Neoclassicism, and Irony: Erik Satie's Socrate
Conclusion