In 1719 Jean-Baptiste Du Bos publishes his treatise Réflexions Critiques sur la Poésia et sur la Peinture, which Voltaire has called ‘the most useful book that has ever be written on the subject by any European nation’. In his book the author deals with the problem of artistic genius, a phenomenon that was in focus from late 17th century in many treatises on theory of art, especially in France and England. This article concentrates on the interpretation of this particular idea in the work of Du Bos, who tries to explain it through a wide range of empirical examples, using the latest achievements from different branches of science. His concept of ‘physiological genius’ and ‘climatic genius’ can be seen as unique. His reflections on sensation...
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Charles Du Bos devoted an unflagging attention to Flaubert’s work (except for Bouvard et Pécuchet, w...
There has long been a link acknowledged between human autonomy and works of artistic genius, sublime...
Denis Diderot, well-known as a philosopher and Encyclopedist, has also been recognized as one of the...
The meaning of genius in public discourses on eighteenth-century sciences was exceptionally ambiguou...
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This article presents selected aspects of the cult of Isaac Newton in France during the Age of the E...
All art can be considered as a result of higher achievements in the work of geniuses. This paper con...
Frédéric Ogée : Je-sais-quoi. The representation of forms of life in the works of William Hogarth. ...
While many studies have chronicled the Romantic legacy of artistic genius, this book uncovers the ro...
René Démoris : Painting and science in the Enlightenment, the birth of an opposition. In France, th...
If everything in the universe is material how can master painters create images of nature which enab...
Elisabeth Lavezzi : Painting and scientific knowledge. The case of Jacques Gautier d'Agoty's Observa...
Le « génie » est une notion courante de l’histoire de l’art dont la définition paraît a priori troub...
Charles Du Bos devoted an unflagging attention to Flaubert’s work (except for Bouvard et Pécuchet, w...
There has long been a link acknowledged between human autonomy and works of artistic genius, sublime...
Denis Diderot, well-known as a philosopher and Encyclopedist, has also been recognized as one of the...
The meaning of genius in public discourses on eighteenth-century sciences was exceptionally ambiguou...
François Azouvi, Michel Baridon and Christine Rolland : The present state of research. Modern crist...
The Locus of Genius: Remarks on the Geography of Art This article begins by analyzing eighteenth-c...
Humphrey Wine : Some aspects of the interaction between science, technology and art. The first part...
This article presents selected aspects of the cult of Isaac Newton in France during the Age of the E...
All art can be considered as a result of higher achievements in the work of geniuses. This paper con...
Frédéric Ogée : Je-sais-quoi. The representation of forms of life in the works of William Hogarth. ...