Summary: In the 1840s, Sweden and Finland were hit by a minor craze for living pictures or tableaux vivants as commercial entertainment. For the price of a ticket, the public could experience the staging, by live actors, of work of arts from antiquity and contemporary sculptors such as Canova and Thorvaldsen. Making strong claims of artistic value, based on the aesthetic theory of Winckelmann and the artistic practice of artists such as Canova, the performances raise interesting questions of how aesthetics worked when set in a commercial framework. The article discusses the problem of beauty faced by entertainers and spectators when art was reenacted for money. The experience of beauty was central to aesthetic theory and to living pictures....
Tableaux vivants, or living pictures, were an important part of nineteenth- and early twentieth-cent...
This article is about the use of dioramas in Sámi exhibitions. The author discusses the use of a spe...
At the end of the nineteenth century, artists acknowledged, once and for all, that they were depende...
Summary: In the 1840s, Sweden and Finland were hit by a minor craze for living pictures or tableaux ...
This article offers a case study in intermediality and explores relationships between tableaux vivan...
This thesis examines one instance of the long nineteenth-century’s engagement with the Antique: the ...
During the 19th century, France was a cultural stronghold filled with political aspects and dreams. ...
In the late 1870's English society witnessed the rise of the aesthetic movement, a phenomenon which ...
What is discussed here are the events taking place in Sweden in 1885, a turbulent year in Swedish ar...
The purpose of this study was to analyze recent appropriations of works of art in advertising. Why w...
One of the great intellectual conceits of the Western world in the nineteenth century was the invent...
By introducing the analytical concept ‘thing-in-between’, in other words a mediating entity acting f...
Dress Books for the use of painters : an editorial purpose for historical paintings (18th-19th centu...
This article offers a case study in intermediality and explores relationships between tableaux vivan...
In the history of nineteenth-century art, sensuality is traditionally regarded as a superficial effe...
Tableaux vivants, or living pictures, were an important part of nineteenth- and early twentieth-cent...
This article is about the use of dioramas in Sámi exhibitions. The author discusses the use of a spe...
At the end of the nineteenth century, artists acknowledged, once and for all, that they were depende...
Summary: In the 1840s, Sweden and Finland were hit by a minor craze for living pictures or tableaux ...
This article offers a case study in intermediality and explores relationships between tableaux vivan...
This thesis examines one instance of the long nineteenth-century’s engagement with the Antique: the ...
During the 19th century, France was a cultural stronghold filled with political aspects and dreams. ...
In the late 1870's English society witnessed the rise of the aesthetic movement, a phenomenon which ...
What is discussed here are the events taking place in Sweden in 1885, a turbulent year in Swedish ar...
The purpose of this study was to analyze recent appropriations of works of art in advertising. Why w...
One of the great intellectual conceits of the Western world in the nineteenth century was the invent...
By introducing the analytical concept ‘thing-in-between’, in other words a mediating entity acting f...
Dress Books for the use of painters : an editorial purpose for historical paintings (18th-19th centu...
This article offers a case study in intermediality and explores relationships between tableaux vivan...
In the history of nineteenth-century art, sensuality is traditionally regarded as a superficial effe...
Tableaux vivants, or living pictures, were an important part of nineteenth- and early twentieth-cent...
This article is about the use of dioramas in Sámi exhibitions. The author discusses the use of a spe...
At the end of the nineteenth century, artists acknowledged, once and for all, that they were depende...