The study of reproduction in sculpture has largely focused on direct copies of an original work, and prioritized the original at the expense of the reproduction. This essay shifts the emphasis towards a more critical examination of the reproduction itself. I address the partial, adaptive and display-specific aspects of reproduction, as afforded by a close reading of two works: The Fallen Angel, produced in white marble in 1887 and 1889 by the Anglo-American-Italian sculptor Waldo Thomas Story (1855-1915). Firstly, I consider the ways in which Story deployed reproduction as a creative engagement with sculpture and its histories, through his adaptive reproduction of three specific antique, neoclassical and contemporary works, subverting and r...
The relationship between photography and sculpture, unlike the dialogue between the latter and paint...
The title of this exhibition, From Statues to Sculpture, su~gests the evolution of three-dimensional...
From the glorified idealism of Classical Antiquity and the perfect proportions of the Renaissance, t...
The study of reproduction in sculpture has largely focused on direct copies of an original work, and...
This article revisits the idea of the centrality of the artist’s touch to nineteenth-century sculptu...
From the late 1960s onwards, Italian sculptors, especially those associated with the Arte Povera mov...
Antiquity is often synonymous with white marble. Such are the general expectations when visitors ent...
This article is the outcome of a conference paper, part of the ‘Archival Interventions in Sculpture’...
Books that reproduced artwork in the nineteenth century showcase the technological and aesthetic dev...
Around the turn of the last century, a dozen manuals on sculpture technique were published. These te...
The aim of this article is to show that reputed restorations may have an unexpected impact on the st...
The sculptors of the Roman Baroque, including masters such as Gian Lorenzo Bernini, Alessandro Algar...
Art is a philosophy as well as a craft. A basic premise of the philosophy of art is that a work must...
While the sculpted object is so obviously carved from hard and lifeless marble, at the same time it...
The Temples at Paestum were ‘rediscovered’ in the mid–eighteenth century and information about the t...
The relationship between photography and sculpture, unlike the dialogue between the latter and paint...
The title of this exhibition, From Statues to Sculpture, su~gests the evolution of three-dimensional...
From the glorified idealism of Classical Antiquity and the perfect proportions of the Renaissance, t...
The study of reproduction in sculpture has largely focused on direct copies of an original work, and...
This article revisits the idea of the centrality of the artist’s touch to nineteenth-century sculptu...
From the late 1960s onwards, Italian sculptors, especially those associated with the Arte Povera mov...
Antiquity is often synonymous with white marble. Such are the general expectations when visitors ent...
This article is the outcome of a conference paper, part of the ‘Archival Interventions in Sculpture’...
Books that reproduced artwork in the nineteenth century showcase the technological and aesthetic dev...
Around the turn of the last century, a dozen manuals on sculpture technique were published. These te...
The aim of this article is to show that reputed restorations may have an unexpected impact on the st...
The sculptors of the Roman Baroque, including masters such as Gian Lorenzo Bernini, Alessandro Algar...
Art is a philosophy as well as a craft. A basic premise of the philosophy of art is that a work must...
While the sculpted object is so obviously carved from hard and lifeless marble, at the same time it...
The Temples at Paestum were ‘rediscovered’ in the mid–eighteenth century and information about the t...
The relationship between photography and sculpture, unlike the dialogue between the latter and paint...
The title of this exhibition, From Statues to Sculpture, su~gests the evolution of three-dimensional...
From the glorified idealism of Classical Antiquity and the perfect proportions of the Renaissance, t...