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This is the first book dedicated to Leonardo da Vinci’s commission for The Virgin of the Rocks. Leonardo completed fewer than twenty paintings in his lifetime, yet he returned twice to this same mysterious subject over the course of a twenty-five year period. Identical in terms of iconography, stylistically these paintings are worlds apart. The first, of c.1482-4, was Leonardo’s magnum opus, catapulting the young artist from obscurity to fame. When, in 1508, he finished the second painting, he was nearing the end of his artistic career and had become an international celebrity. Why did he revisit The Virgin of the Rocks? What was the meaning behind the cavernous subterranean landscape? W...
In November 2006, the International Conference on Romanticism convened for its annual conference on the campus of Arizona State University and explored a wide range of work identified as “engaged romantic,” as a mode and a practice, rather than simply as a literary historical period defined by a specific temporal spectrum (c. 1750-1850). As the introduction to the volume suggests, most writers during the period were actively engaged in the cultural articulation of the aesthetics, criticism, ethics, poetics, and politics of the age, and a large number of writers deployed their talents to help transform the public sphere, whether shaping responses to the practices of slavery or resisting t...
"When the Smithsonian Institution's first Hall of Physical Anthropology opened in 1965, the first thing visitors saw were 160 Andean skulls fixed to the wall like a mushroom cloud. Empires of the Dead explains that Skull Wall's origins, and this introduction establishes its scope: a history from 1532 to the present of how the collection of Inca mummies, Andean crania, and a pre-Hispanic surgery named trepanation made "ancient Peruvians" the single largest population in the Smithsonian and many other museums in Peru, the Americas, and the world. This introduction argues that the Hall of Physical Anthropology displayed these collections while hiding their foundation on Indigenous, Andean, and Peruvian cultures of healing and science. These "Peruvian ancestors" of American anthropology reveal the importance of Indigenous and Latin American science and empire to global history, and their relevance to debates over museums and Indigenous human remains today"--
A fresh look at the global dimensions of US painting from the 1850s to 1898. Painting US Empire is the first book to offer a synthetic account of art and US imperialism around the globe in the nineteenth century. In this work, art historian Maggie M. Cao crafts a nuanced portrait of nineteenth-century US painters’ complicity with and resistance to ascendant US imperialism, offering eye-opening readings of canonical works, landscapes of polar expeditions and tropical tourism, still lifes of imported goods, genre paintings, and ethnographic portraiture. Revealing how the US empire was “hidden in plain sight” in the art of this period, Cao examines artists including Frederic Edwin Church ...
To perform a musical score implies the transformation of a symbolically coded text into vibrant sound. In Performing by the Book? a carefully selected cadre of artist-researchers dissects this delicate act in critical ways. Offering first-hand insights into the notational, structural and interpretative challenges faced by musicians in dealing with texts of all kinds, the chapters traverse the spectrum between the Middle Ages and the age of Stockhausen. In a harmonious blend of scholarly allure and individual artistry, free from academic obfuscation, the contributors keep a keen eye on the limits of interpretation, both in terms of the interpretative process itself and of the balance between textual faithfulness and artistic autonomy. This comprehensive volume is an indispensable guide for everyone interested in the relationship between musical performance and texts.
The nineteenth century was an era of breathtakingly ambitious geographic expeditions across the Americas. The seminal Chorographic Commission of Colombia, which began in 1850 and lasted about a decade, was one of Latin America's most extensive. The commission's mandate was to define and map the young republic and its resources with an eye toward modernization. In this history of the commission, Nancy P. Appelbaum focuses on the geographers' fieldwork practices and visual production as the men traversed the mountains, savannahs, and forests of more than thirty provinces in order to delineate the country's territorial and racial composition. Their assumptions and methods, Appelbaum argues, con...
Con la publicación de esta obra colectiva queremos contribuir a la comprensión de los procesos de configuración de la memoria social en Colombia, a partir de una historia cultural de los monumentos enfocada en la forma en que las representaciones y apropiaciones históricas de estas obras se han ido transformando y resignificando con el tiempo. A partir de diferentes casos de estudio, correspondientes a diversos territorios y momentos históricos, los autores indagan acerca de las representaciones sobre la nación y su historia que se inscriben en los monumentos; qué es lo que hacen visible y qué ocultan; cuáles son las inclusiones y exclusiones en la monumentalización; qué actores se disputan los sentidos inscritos en los monumentos en diferentes contextos históricos y cómo lo hacen y, qué políticas de la memoria, y el olvido, subyacen a la historia de los monumentos conmemorativos en Colombia. Así mismo, este texto hace un aporte importante a la historiografía colombiana sobre los monumentos, da cuenta de cómo se ha realizado la investigación acerca de estos objetos culturales en nuestro país y ofrece nuevas interpretaciones y explicaciones.
El libro que tiene en sus manos es la primera reedición del libreto de la ópera Florinda, que Rafael Pombo publicó en 1880. Consta de un estudio introductorio, una edición crítica del libreto tal como fue publicado en 1880 y seis artículos escritos por diferentes especialistas que ofrecen una mirada transdisciplinar del estudio de esta ópera. Esta publicación forma parte del esfuerzo de la Facultad de Artes y Humanidades de la Universidad de los Andes por recuperar las óperas colombianas, que se inició en el 2014 con la reedición del libreto de Ester, de Rafael Pombo y Manuel Briceño, que también constaba de la edición crítica más una antología de textos críticos de diversos autores.