Albert Moore (1841-93) was one of the most important late Victorian artists. In a single-minded quest for aesthetic perfection, he employed the female figure to embody abstract systems of ideal beauty, and created many of the iconic and defining images of the Aesthetic Movement. Yet he has remained a shadowy figure. Based on original research and unpublished family documents, Robyn Asleson's monograph presents a fresh view of the artist's allegedly reclusive personality, and firmly establishes him as a major figure and a significant precursor of Modernism. This beautiful book is now issued in a paperback format that will bring the artist to a wide and appreciative audience. The Victorian artist Albert Moore (1841-93) pursued a lifelong quest for ideal beauty - an ambitious crusade which propelled him from the naturalism of John Ruskin and the Pre-Raphaelites, through the medievalism of William Morris and the Arts and Crafts movement, to the Classicism and Japonisme of his friends Frederic Leighton and James McNeill Whistler. Before his twenty-fifth year, Moore had outstripped the aesthetic interests of his closest colleagues and embarked on a solitary search for the timeless secrets of aesthetic perfection. In a series of exquisitely executed paintings, Moore employed the female figure to embody the abstract systems of ideal beauty that he discerned in the finest examples of art and nature. Building on the artist's meticulous watercolour studies of nature and his monumental figural decorations for architecture, these paintings chart the evolution of Moore's singular artistic creed and provide many of the defining images of the Aesthetic Movement. Fiercely protective of his independence, Moore rejected the high visibility embraced by his celebrated professional colleagues. Thus, ironically, while his paintings hung prominently at annual exhibitions of the Royal Academy and the Grosvenor Gallery, Moore himself remained a shadowy figure on the periphery of the Victorian art world. He remains an enigma today. Although his paintings are among the most celebrated icons of the Victorian era, few recognize in them the unique analysis of pure form that established Moore as the most radical exponent of English Aestheticism and one of the most progressive artists of the nineteenth century. A one-man avant-garde, Moore anticipated by several generations the abstract aesthetic concerns of twentieth-century Modernism. This full-length study of Albert Moore - the first to appear in over 100 years - seeks to restore the artist to his rightful place in art history, while also fleshing out his hitherto mysterious personality and lifestyle. Drawing on unpublished materials and on a mass of new and fully documented research, the book analyses the origins and development of Moore's aesthetic systems and traces his formative links to architectural theory and practice. New evidence concerning Moore's personal life and professional networks debunks the myth of his hermit-like existence, and sheds light on his notorious exclusion from Royal Academy membership. In particular, the author reveals that Moore's friendship with and influence upon James McNeill Whistler were closer and more important than has hitherto been assumed. The artist's studio practice and his relationship with patrons, models and students are also considered. In place of the taciturn recluse of Victorian legend, Albert Moore emerges as a passionate and audacious crusader for beauty, an artist well ahead of his time.
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坦白讲,这本书的结构安排是相当反传统的,甚至可以说有些“任性”。它没有明显的起承转合,章节之间的过渡常常是突兀的,时间线也常常在不同的历史时期之间跳跃,让人有时会感到一种叙事的眩晕感。我印象特别深的是,故事的重心在第十章突然从对一个贵族家庭的细致描摹,猛地转向了一群身份低微的工匠的日常劳作,这种转换让我一度怀疑自己是不是拿错了一本书。这种非线性的叙事手法,无疑增加了读者的理解难度,它要求读者主动去寻找那些隐藏在时间碎片背后的关联。但一旦你接受了这种破碎的叙事方式,你会开始领悟到作者的深意——也许作者试图表达的正是历史的碎片化、记忆的不可靠性,以及个体在宏大历史进程中的渺小与无足轻重。它不是在给你一个完整的故事,而是在提供一堆散落的碎片,让你自己去拼凑一个关于“存在”的、也许永远无法被完全拼凑完整的图景。
评分这本书,说实话,刚拿到手的时候我还有点犹豫。封面设计得非常朴实,甚至可以说有点过时了,没有任何花哨的元素,就是那种老派精装书的质感。我原本期待的是一个波澜壮阔的史诗故事,或者至少是那种能让人一口气读完的快节奏悬疑。然而,捧起这本书,感觉到的却是一种沉甸甸的历史感,仿佛每一页都浸透着岁月的尘埃。我花了整整一个下午才翻开第一章,然后发现里面的文字密度简直令人发指。作者似乎对每一个细节都抱有一种近乎偏执的追求,大量的篇幅被用来描述一些看似与主线毫不相关的社会风俗、地域地理,甚至是某个特定历史时期工匠们使用的工具的构造。我一度感到阅读的进程异常缓慢,就像在泥泞的沼泽地里跋涉,每前进一步都需要付出额外的努力。但奇怪的是,当我终于适应了这种叙事节奏后,那些原本觉得冗余的描述,却像一块块精心打磨的拼图,开始悄然构建出一个宏大而细腻的背景。它不是直接告诉你发生了什么,而是通过环境的刻画,让你自己去感受那个时代的氛围,那种潜移默化的影响,比直接的叙事冲击力更强,也更让人难以忘怀。这本书需要的不是匆忙的翻阅,而是一种近乎朝圣般的沉浸。
评分这本书带给我的最终感受,是一种近乎哲学层面的沉思。它并非一本教你如何成功的书,也不是一本提供即时情感慰藉的作品。它像一面冰冷的镜子,映照出人性的幽暗角落和历史的冷酷无情。故事中那些人物的命运,很少有大团圆的结局,更多的是接受宿命的无奈与挣扎。我合上书页时,没有那种“啊,终于看完了”的解脱感,反而有一种被某种宏大而又虚无的情绪笼罩的感觉。它迫使我去思考许多日常生活中会刻意回避的问题:自由的边界在哪里?记忆究竟是真相还是谎言?人类的努力在时间的洪流中是否真的有意义?这本书的价值不在于它讲述了什么故事,而在于它在你心中激起了多少久久不能平息的疑问。它不是提供答案的,而是提出了一系列极其深刻、且往往令人不安的问题,这些问题会像种子一样,在你平静的生活中生根发芽,持续影响你对世界的看法,这才是它最强大的力量所在。
评分这本书在语言运用上的精妙之处,是我读过的大部分作品中都难以企及的。它不是那种华丽辞藻堆砌的“文学腔”,而是一种极其克制却又充满力量的语言风格。作者似乎能精准地找到每一个场景、每一种心境最恰当的词汇,不多不少,恰到好处。我尤其欣赏它对于“沉默”的处理。很多时候,最重要的信息并非通过台词传达,而是通过人物的停顿、视线的游移,或者仅仅是环境音的描写来暗示。比如,有一次关键的对峙场景,作者用了整整半页纸来描绘窗外飘落的雪花以及屋内壁炉中木柴燃烧发出的微弱噼啪声,而人物之间,只有两句简短的问候。然而,在那份寂静中,蕴含的情感张力,远超任何激烈的争吵。这种“留白”的艺术,使得阅读过程充满了回味的空间。每当我以为自己理解了某个段落的含义时,重新阅读一遍,总能发现新的层次,仿佛是在一个平静的水面上投下石子,涟漪不断扩散,揭示出更深的水底秘密。
评分我必须承认,我的阅读体验充满了挫败感,特别是在中段部分。我习惯了那种清晰的因果链条,人物的行为动机需要明确的铺垫和解释,但这本书完全反其道而行之。主人公的行为逻辑常常像是一团迷雾,你读完了一段对话,合上书本,脑子里剩下的只有“为什么?”。他们似乎被一种更深层次、更难以言喻的驱动力所驱使,那些驱动力可能源自家族的诅咒、古老的信仰,甚至是纯粹的、非理性的冲动。有那么几章,我几乎想直接跳过,因为人物之间的情感纠葛极其晦涩,他们的对话充满了双关语和只有那个特定社群才能理解的隐喻。我尝试去查阅一些背景资料,试图理解作者构建的那个世界观,但线索太少了,很多关键信息都隐藏在只言片语之中。这不像是一本为你量身定做的通俗读物,它更像是一份未完全破译的密码本,要求读者投入极大的心智资源去“参与”到意义的构建中。这种强烈的互动性和挑战性,对于追求轻松阅读体验的人来说,无疑是一场灾难,但对我而言,它提供了一种久违的智力上的刺激,仿佛在和作者进行一场高难度的智力对决。
评分看过Moore的画后再看别人的画作多觉颜色刺眼。19世纪观念超前的画家,探求古希腊均衡美的神髓,非叙事非观念的纯绘画,注重线块色彩的细腻协调和纹理装饰性,将人体作为静物来描绘;其我行我素的画风和生活作风为皇美排斥。
评分上图书店立读,图版把为某画所做各版草稿乃至作为原型的古希腊作品并列出来。他描绘的体态浑圆但不丰硕的女人体乃至面庞总给我一种特别中性的感觉。
评分看过Moore的画后再看别人的画作多觉颜色刺眼。19世纪观念超前的画家,探求古希腊均衡美的神髓,非叙事非观念的纯绘画,注重线块色彩的细腻协调和纹理装饰性,将人体作为静物来描绘;其我行我素的画风和生活作风为皇美排斥。
评分看过Moore的画后再看别人的画作多觉颜色刺眼。19世纪观念超前的画家,探求古希腊均衡美的神髓,非叙事非观念的纯绘画,注重线块色彩的细腻协调和纹理装饰性,将人体作为静物来描绘;其我行我素的画风和生活作风为皇美排斥。
评分看过Moore的画后再看别人的画作多觉颜色刺眼。19世纪观念超前的画家,探求古希腊均衡美的神髓,非叙事非观念的纯绘画,注重线块色彩的细腻协调和纹理装饰性,将人体作为静物来描绘;其我行我素的画风和生活作风为皇美排斥。
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