《物质灵感:19世纪及以后艺术对象的兴趣》作者:乔纳·西格尔(书评)

IF 0.2 3区 社会学 0 HUMANITIES, MULTIDISCIPLINARY VICTORIAN STUDIES Pub Date : 2023-01-01 DOI:10.2979/vic.2023.a911122
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Starting from these premises, Jonah Siegel's fascinating new book explores how materiality affected both the lived experience of and critical discussions about art, focusing primarily on the second half of the century but frequently also stretching back to Romantic literature and right up to the present day. Material Inspirations: The Interests of the Art Object in the Nineteenth Century and After charts a vast territory. Readers, however, are helpfully given some guiding threads: the reception of classical antiquity; responses to Raphael; the influence of artistic reproduction and display on categories of perception and art writing. At the heart of the book is a sustained analysis of the mediating role played by institutions, notably libraries and museums. These, Siegel explains, \"came into their own in the nineteenth century as foils to the onslaught of change that characterized the period,\" becoming \"ideal locations for reflection on the power of material things, especially when those things stand at an angle to the amnesiac drives of modern culture\" (52, 53). Siegel is an expert on museum culture. Here, he writes compellingly about how the museum became an increasingly unsatisfactory, puzzling space, which struggled to accommodate the new ways of coming close to art that were facilitated by travel and transport technologies. For a middle-class public that had experienced seeing classical sculpture in sun-flooded archaeological sites and contemplating religious paintings in incense-suffused churches, encountering such objects in museums came across as an act of cultural deracination. Examples from George Eliot and Vernon Lee show how writers were sensitive [End Page 329] to this shift whereby the museum becomes a place not only to know the object but to problematize systems of values and forms of knowledge. The library, as the symbolic space of print culture, complicated responses in a similar fashion. Siegel pays particular attention to how engravings and illustrations mediated the circulation of classical objects, affecting the construction of their cultural value in determining ways. In this process, popular illustrated journals came to play a pivotal, though often overlooked, role in shaping the history of taste. Ranging from William Blake to John Ruskin, Siegel presents us with instances in which the lack of access to the physical original provided a powerful source of creative and literary inspiration. Material Inspirations is arranged thematically into three parts, but examples and ideas echo each other in suggestive ways across the book. The first, entitled \"Interesting,\" introduces the argument on Raphael as a shaping figure for nineteenth-century debates about taste and artistic value. Siegel's key intervention here is that a sustained engagement with materiality should prompt us to reconsider the standard narrative that nineteenth-century art culture drove toward disinterestedness and formalism, a trajectory that finds its inevitable telos in the twentieth-century triumph of abstraction. Siegel finds evidence for this in, among others, Ruskin and Walter Pater's art writings, in which the pull of death and eros acts as a powerful counterforce to the drive toward aesthetic autonomy (an original reading of Pater's \"Conclusion\" to The Renaissance [1873] reveals a strand of scepticism about disinterestedness). \"Remains,\" the second part, deals with the reception of classical antiquities. The focus is on how drawings, engravings, and printed works such as compendia mediated the reception and circulation of ancient sculpture and, in this process, endowed it with different forms of materiality. 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Readers, however, are helpfully given some guiding threads: the reception of classical antiquity; responses to Raphael; the influence of artistic reproduction and display on categories of perception and art writing. At the heart of the book is a sustained analysis of the mediating role played by institutions, notably libraries and museums. These, Siegel explains, \\\"came into their own in the nineteenth century as foils to the onslaught of change that characterized the period,\\\" becoming \\\"ideal locations for reflection on the power of material things, especially when those things stand at an angle to the amnesiac drives of modern culture\\\" (52, 53). Siegel is an expert on museum culture. Here, he writes compellingly about how the museum became an increasingly unsatisfactory, puzzling space, which struggled to accommodate the new ways of coming close to art that were facilitated by travel and transport technologies. For a middle-class public that had experienced seeing classical sculpture in sun-flooded archaeological sites and contemplating religious paintings in incense-suffused churches, encountering such objects in museums came across as an act of cultural deracination. Examples from George Eliot and Vernon Lee show how writers were sensitive [End Page 329] to this shift whereby the museum becomes a place not only to know the object but to problematize systems of values and forms of knowledge. The library, as the symbolic space of print culture, complicated responses in a similar fashion. Siegel pays particular attention to how engravings and illustrations mediated the circulation of classical objects, affecting the construction of their cultural value in determining ways. In this process, popular illustrated journals came to play a pivotal, though often overlooked, role in shaping the history of taste. 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引用次数: 0

摘要

《物质灵感:19世纪及以后的艺术对象的利益》,作者:乔纳·西格尔;第28页+ 373页。牛津和纽约:牛津大学出版社,2020年,66.00美元。随着19世纪艺术接触到越来越多的观众,有关其公共价值的辩论也相应增多。关于艺术作品应该在哪里以及如何展示,提出了实践和理论上的关切。作家,不少于专家和评论家,面临着从物质存在中把握艺术对象的挑战——这一挑战产生了复杂的情感,因为它往往使观众意识到自己的身体是感知和欲望的器官。从这些前提出发,乔纳·西格尔这本引人入胜的新书探讨了物质性是如何影响生活经验和对艺术的批判性讨论的,主要关注20世纪下半叶,但也经常追溯到浪漫主义文学,直到今天。《物质灵感:19世纪及以后艺术对象的兴趣》描绘了一个广阔的领域。然而,本书为读者提供了一些有益的指导线索:对古典古代的接受;对拉斐尔的回应;艺术再现与展示对感知范畴与艺术写作的影响。这本书的核心是对机构,尤其是图书馆和博物馆所扮演的中介角色的持续分析。西格尔解释说,这些作品“在19世纪成为当时变革冲击的衬托物”,成为“反思物质力量的理想场所,尤其是当这些东西与现代文化的健忘驱动形成一定角度时”(52,53)。西格尔是博物馆文化方面的专家。在这本书中,他令人信服地描述了博物馆是如何变成一个越来越令人不满意、令人困惑的空间的,它努力适应旅行和交通技术促进的接近艺术的新方式。对于中产阶级公众来说,在阳光普照的考古遗址里欣赏古典雕塑,在弥漫着香气的教堂里欣赏宗教绘画,在博物馆里遇到这样的东西是一种文化破坏行为。乔治·艾略特(George Eliot)和弗农·李(Vernon Lee)的例子表明,作家们对这种转变是多么敏感,即博物馆不仅成为了解对象的地方,而且成为对价值体系和知识形式提出问题的地方。图书馆作为印刷文化的象征空间,也以类似的方式做出了复杂的回应。西格尔特别关注版画和插图如何介导古典物品的流通,以决定方式影响其文化价值的构建。在这个过程中,流行的插图杂志在塑造品味的历史上扮演了一个关键的角色,尽管经常被忽视。从威廉·布莱克到约翰·罗斯金,西格尔向我们展示了一些例子,在这些例子中,缺乏接触实物原作的机会,为创作和文学灵感提供了强大的源泉。《物质灵感》按主题分为三个部分,但贯穿全书的例子和观点以暗示性的方式相互呼应。第一篇题为“有趣”,介绍了拉斐尔作为19世纪关于品味和艺术价值辩论的塑造人物的观点。西格尔在这里的关键干预是,与物质性的持续接触应该促使我们重新考虑19世纪艺术文化推动的标准叙事,即冷漠和形式主义,这条轨迹在20世纪抽象的胜利中找到了不可避免的终点。西格尔在拉斯金(Ruskin)和沃尔特·佩特(Walter Pater)的艺术作品中找到了证据,其中死亡和爱欲的拉力对审美自主性的推动起到了强大的反作用(对佩特《文艺复兴的结论》(1873年)的原始阅读揭示了对无私的怀疑)。“遗迹”,第二部分,涉及古典文物的接收。重点是绘画、雕刻和印刷作品,如纲要,如何中介古代雕塑的接收和流通,并在此过程中赋予其不同形式的物质性。恢复和突出这些调解……
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Material Inspirations: The Interests of the Art Object in the Nineteenth Century and After by Jonah Siegel (review)
Reviewed by: Material Inspirations: The Interests of the Art Object in the Nineteenth Century and After by Jonah Siegel Stefano Evangelista (bio) Material Inspirations: The Interests of the Art Object in the Nineteenth Century and After, by Jonah Siegel; pp. xxviii + 373. Oxford and New York: Oxford University Press, 2020, $66.00, £49.99. As art reached ever larger audiences over the course of the nineteenth century, there was a corresponding growth in debates about its public value. Practical and theoretical concerns were raised about where and how art works ought to be displayed. Writers, no less than experts and critics, engaged with the challenges of grasping art objects in their material existence—a challenge that generated complex emotions as it tended to make viewers conscious of their own bodies as organs of perception and desire. Starting from these premises, Jonah Siegel's fascinating new book explores how materiality affected both the lived experience of and critical discussions about art, focusing primarily on the second half of the century but frequently also stretching back to Romantic literature and right up to the present day. Material Inspirations: The Interests of the Art Object in the Nineteenth Century and After charts a vast territory. Readers, however, are helpfully given some guiding threads: the reception of classical antiquity; responses to Raphael; the influence of artistic reproduction and display on categories of perception and art writing. At the heart of the book is a sustained analysis of the mediating role played by institutions, notably libraries and museums. These, Siegel explains, "came into their own in the nineteenth century as foils to the onslaught of change that characterized the period," becoming "ideal locations for reflection on the power of material things, especially when those things stand at an angle to the amnesiac drives of modern culture" (52, 53). Siegel is an expert on museum culture. Here, he writes compellingly about how the museum became an increasingly unsatisfactory, puzzling space, which struggled to accommodate the new ways of coming close to art that were facilitated by travel and transport technologies. For a middle-class public that had experienced seeing classical sculpture in sun-flooded archaeological sites and contemplating religious paintings in incense-suffused churches, encountering such objects in museums came across as an act of cultural deracination. Examples from George Eliot and Vernon Lee show how writers were sensitive [End Page 329] to this shift whereby the museum becomes a place not only to know the object but to problematize systems of values and forms of knowledge. The library, as the symbolic space of print culture, complicated responses in a similar fashion. Siegel pays particular attention to how engravings and illustrations mediated the circulation of classical objects, affecting the construction of their cultural value in determining ways. In this process, popular illustrated journals came to play a pivotal, though often overlooked, role in shaping the history of taste. Ranging from William Blake to John Ruskin, Siegel presents us with instances in which the lack of access to the physical original provided a powerful source of creative and literary inspiration. Material Inspirations is arranged thematically into three parts, but examples and ideas echo each other in suggestive ways across the book. The first, entitled "Interesting," introduces the argument on Raphael as a shaping figure for nineteenth-century debates about taste and artistic value. Siegel's key intervention here is that a sustained engagement with materiality should prompt us to reconsider the standard narrative that nineteenth-century art culture drove toward disinterestedness and formalism, a trajectory that finds its inevitable telos in the twentieth-century triumph of abstraction. Siegel finds evidence for this in, among others, Ruskin and Walter Pater's art writings, in which the pull of death and eros acts as a powerful counterforce to the drive toward aesthetic autonomy (an original reading of Pater's "Conclusion" to The Renaissance [1873] reveals a strand of scepticism about disinterestedness). "Remains," the second part, deals with the reception of classical antiquities. The focus is on how drawings, engravings, and printed works such as compendia mediated the reception and circulation of ancient sculpture and, in this process, endowed it with different forms of materiality. Recovering and highlighting such mediations...
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来源期刊
VICTORIAN STUDIES
VICTORIAN STUDIES HUMANITIES, MULTIDISCIPLINARY-
CiteScore
0.90
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9.10%
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期刊介绍: For more than 50 years, Victorian Studies has been devoted to the study of British culture of the Victorian age. It regularly includes interdisciplinary articles on comparative literature, social and political history, and the histories of education, philosophy, fine arts, economics, law and science, as well as review essays, and an extensive book review section. An annual cumulative and fully searchable bibliography of noteworthy publications that have a bearing on the Victorian period is available electronically and is included in the cost of a subscription. Victorian Studies Online Bibliography
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