The materiality of sculpture was essential to Vernon Lee’s psychological theory of aesthetics based on the beholder’s physical responses. Through collaboration with her lover Clementina Anstruther-Thomson, Lee developed a theory of embodiment based on German psychological empathy theories which was reliant on gallery rather than laboratory experiments. This chapter focuses on the reception of their work within the psychological circles of the time and, in contrast to interpretation of the two women’s intellectual collaboration as a transposition of lesbian desire, I argue that Lee’s dialogue with Karl Groos around the concept of “inner mimicry” is essential to examine how sculpture also allowed her to explore sexuality plastically. Originat...
Prompted by my practice, I recognised that sculpture intended to engage an empathetic response from ...
This dissertation investigates how phallic imagery in artwork made by a woman can have psychological...
My thesis investigates the relationship between the ‘queer’ subjectivities and visual culture of Ste...
PhDThis thesis examines the fantastic tales of the marginalized writer Vernon Lee (Violet Paget 185...
What does art do to our bodies? This project attempts to find out, guided by an extraordinary Vict...
Throughout her career, the late-Victorian essayist, fiction writer, and aesthetic theorist Vernon Le...
Scholars have often identified the connections between Vernon Lee\u2019s works and her complex sexua...
PhDEMBARGOED UNTIL 01/06/2014This thesis explores the critical aesthetics of Vernon Lee (Violet Page...
What is the relationship between erotic desire and aesthetic contemplation? This question was centr...
Burdett Gardner was the first scholar to gain access to the personal correspondence of Vernon Lee (1...
The sculptural trope enjoyed a revival in later Victorian literature, especially the classical sculp...
The article provides an analysis of the shared life writing of Vernon Lee and Clementina Anstruther-...
Traditionally, our idea of late-19th-century British Aestheticism has been understood as a socially-...
Vernon Lee’s essayistic writings on music are underpinned by an ethical commitment to modes of relat...
Addressing representation, Galia Ofek writes that “self-identity is constructed and determined, to a...
Prompted by my practice, I recognised that sculpture intended to engage an empathetic response from ...
This dissertation investigates how phallic imagery in artwork made by a woman can have psychological...
My thesis investigates the relationship between the ‘queer’ subjectivities and visual culture of Ste...
PhDThis thesis examines the fantastic tales of the marginalized writer Vernon Lee (Violet Paget 185...
What does art do to our bodies? This project attempts to find out, guided by an extraordinary Vict...
Throughout her career, the late-Victorian essayist, fiction writer, and aesthetic theorist Vernon Le...
Scholars have often identified the connections between Vernon Lee\u2019s works and her complex sexua...
PhDEMBARGOED UNTIL 01/06/2014This thesis explores the critical aesthetics of Vernon Lee (Violet Page...
What is the relationship between erotic desire and aesthetic contemplation? This question was centr...
Burdett Gardner was the first scholar to gain access to the personal correspondence of Vernon Lee (1...
The sculptural trope enjoyed a revival in later Victorian literature, especially the classical sculp...
The article provides an analysis of the shared life writing of Vernon Lee and Clementina Anstruther-...
Traditionally, our idea of late-19th-century British Aestheticism has been understood as a socially-...
Vernon Lee’s essayistic writings on music are underpinned by an ethical commitment to modes of relat...
Addressing representation, Galia Ofek writes that “self-identity is constructed and determined, to a...
Prompted by my practice, I recognised that sculpture intended to engage an empathetic response from ...
This dissertation investigates how phallic imagery in artwork made by a woman can have psychological...
My thesis investigates the relationship between the ‘queer’ subjectivities and visual culture of Ste...