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引用次数: 0
摘要
在经历了一个多世纪的相对忽视之后,大卫·斯图尔特·厄斯金,第11代巴肯伯爵,在1785年至1829年间在他的德莱伯格庄园的活动受到了越来越多的学术审查。伯爵隐退到德雷伯,与其说是为了逃避他作为古董协会创始人的高调形象,不如说是为了延续他的古董和政治兴趣。事实上,像诗人詹姆斯·汤姆森(James Thomson)的缪斯神庙(Temple of Muses),尤其是威廉·华莱士(William Wallace)的巨大雕像这样的景观特征,最近被视为高度政治民族主义-历史浪漫主义景观的一部分。在确认这些纪念碑本质上的政治性质的同时,本文将探讨辉格党和工会主义者对它们的另一种解读。与此同时,尽管强调了巴肯文物议程的连续性,但它将试图展示这是如何逐渐与伯爵更广泛的个人热情融合在一起的,比如霍勒斯·沃波尔的草莓山,古典古董和伦敦皇家学院的美术,形成了他职业生涯中独特的第二个夏天。
The Earl of Buchan's Second Summer: Dryburgh (1785–1829)
After over a century of relative neglect, the activities of David Steuart Erskine, the eleventh Earl of Buchan, on his Dryburgh estate between 1785 and 1829 have come under increasing academic scrutiny. The Earl’s retirement to Dryburgh has been seen less as a retreat from his high public profile as the founder of the Society of Antiquaries and more as a continuation both of his antiquarian and political interests. Indeed, landscape features such as the Temple of the Muses to the poet James Thomson and especially the giant statue to William Wallace have been viewed recently as part of a highly political nationalist-historic romantic landscape. While confirming the essentially political nature of these monuments, this article will explore an alternative whig and unionist reading of them. At the same time, although highlighting the continuity of Buchan’s antiquarian agenda, it will attempt to show how this gradually merged with a wide range of the Earl’s more personal enthusiasms such as Horace Walpole’s Strawberry Hill, classical antiquity and the beaux arts of London’s Royal Academy to form a distinctive second summer to his career.