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In the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries, naturalists, poets and artists were united in their love of trees. William Gilpin began his influential 'Remarks on Forest Scenery' (1791) with the bold statement that 'It is no exaggerated praise to call a tree the grandest, and most beautiful of all the productions of the earth.' Illustrated books and tree portraits celebrated the beauty, antiquity and diversity of individual, and particularly ancient specimens. A wide range of drawing manuals showed artists and amateurs how to express their 'character' and 'anatomy', as if they were human subjects. Paintings of woodland scenes provided welcome relief from city life, and studies of exotic trees reflected the growth of tourism and empire. The arrival of new species from all over the world aroused much excitement and scientific activity. At the same time, the native trees - oak, ash, beech, elm - acquired new resonance as emblems of the rural countryside. Many of Britain's most important landscape painters, including Paul Sandby, John Constable, Samuel Palmer, Edward Lear, and the Pre-Raphaelites, made themselves experts in the drawing and painting of trees.
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Subjects
Trees in art, English Drawing, English Painting, Drawing, Painting, britishTimes
18th century, 19th centuryEdition | Availability |
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Silent witnesses: trees in British art, 1760-1870
2017, Sansom & Co, a publishing imprint of Redcliffe Press Ltd
in English
1911408127 9781911408123
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Includes bibliographical references (pages 184-188) and index.
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- Created December 20, 2022
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August 17, 2024 | Edited by ImportBot | import existing book |
December 20, 2022 | Created by MARC Bot | Imported from marc_columbia MARC record |