Painting with Fire
Sir Joshua Reynolds, Photography, and the Temporally Evolving Chemical Object
Painting with Fire
Sir Joshua Reynolds, Photography, and the Temporally Evolving Chemical Object
Tracing the long arc of chemically produced and reproduced art from the 1670s through the 1860s, the book reconsiders early photography by situating it in relationship to Reynolds’s replicated paintings and the literal engines of British industry. By following the chemicals, Painting with Fire remaps familiar stories about academic painting and pictorial experiment amid the industrialization of chemical knowledge.
304 pages | 20 color plates, 68 halftones, 1 table | 7 x 10 | © 2019
Art: British Art, Photography
History: History of Technology
Reviews
Table of Contents
1 “Pictures . . . in time petrify’d”
2 Joshua Reynolds’s “Nice Chymistry” in the 1770s
3 “Rend’rd Imortal”: The Work of Art in an Age of Chemical Reproduction
4 Space, Time, and Chemistry: Making Enlightenment “Photography” in the 1860s
Conclusion: Art History in/as an Age of Combustion
Acknowledgments
Notes
Bibliography
Index
Awards
Historians of British Art: Historians of British Art Book Prize
Won
American Society for 18th Century Studies: Louis Gottschalk Prize
Honorable Mention
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