Preface xiv
         Faculty and Student Resources for Teaching and Learning with Janson’s History of Art xix
         Introduction xxi
         PART ONE: THE ANCIENT WORLD
         Chapter 1: Prehistoric Art
         PALEOLITHIC ART 2
         MATERIALS AND TECHNIQUES: Cave Painting 5
         Interpreting Prehistoric Painting 5
         Paleolithic Carving 7
         INFORMING ART: Telling Time: Labels and Periods 9
         Paleolithic houses 11
         NEOLITHIC ART 11
         Settled Societies and Neolithic Art 11
         Architecture in Europe: Tombs and Rituals 15
         INFORMING ART: Dating Techniques 17
         Chapter 2: Ancient Near Eastern Art
         SUMERIAN ART 22
         Temple Architecture: Linking Heaven and Earth 23
         MATERIALS AND TECHNIQUES: Mud Brick 23
         Sculpture and Inlay 25
         PRIMARY SOURCES: The Gilgamesh Epic 25
         Visual Narratives 27
         Cylinder Seals 29
         THE ART HISTORIAN’S LENS: Losses Through Looting 29
         ART OF AKKAD 30
         Sculpture: Power and Narrative 30
         NEO-SUMERIAN REVIVAL 32
         Architecture: The Ziggurat of Ur 32
         Sculpture: Figures of Gudea 32
         PRIMARY SOURCES: Texts on Gudea Figures from Lagash and Surrounding Areas, ca. 2100 33
         BABYLONIAN ART 33
         The Code of Hammurabi 34
         ASSYRIAN ART 34
         PRIMARY SOURCES: The Code of Hammurabi 35
         Art of Empire: Expressing Royal Power 37
         LATE BABYLONIAN ART 37
         The Royal Palace 38
         REGIONAL NEAR EASTERN ART 38
         The Hittites 40
         The Phoenicians 40
         The Hebrews 41
         IRANIAN ART 41
         Early Iranian Art 42
         The Persian Empire: Cosmopolitan Heirs to the Mesopotamian Tradition 43
         Mesopotamia Between Persian and Islamic Dominion 46
         Chapter 3: Egyptian Art
         PREDYNASTIC AND EARLY DYNASTIC ART 50
         The Palette of King Narmer 50
         INFORMING ART: Egyptian Gods and Goddesses 52
         THE OLD KINGDOM: A GOLDEN AGE 53
         Old Kingdom Funerary Complexes 53
         INFORMING ART: Major Periods in Ancient Egypt 54
         The Pyramids at Giza: Reflecting a New Royal Role 55
         MATERIALS AND TECHNIQUES: Building the Pyramids 56
         PRIMARY SOURCES: Excerpt from the Pyramid Text of Unis (r. 2341—2311 BCE) 58
         Representing the Human Figure 59
         THE MIDDLE KINGDOM: REASSERTING
         TRADITION THROUGH THE ARTS 62
         Royal Portraiture: Changing Expressions and Proportions 62
         Funerary Architecture 63
         THE NEW KINGDOM: RESTORED GLORY 65
         Royal Burials in the Valley of the Kings 65
         Temples to the Gods 67
         Block Statues 70
         Images in New Kingdom Tombs 71
         AKHENATEN AND THE AMARNA STYLE 72
         The Amarna Style 72
         Tutankhamun and the Aftermath of Amarna 75
         THE ART HISTORIAN’S LENS: Interpreting Ancient Travel Writers 75
         PAPYRUS SCROLLS: THE BOOK OF THE DEAD 77
         PRIMARY SOURCES: The Book of the Dead 77
         LATE EGYPT 78
         Chapter 4: Aegean Art
         EARLY CYCLADIC ART 82
         MINOAN ART 84
         The “Palace” at Knossos 84
         Wall Paintings: Representing Rituals and Nature 86
         THE ART HISTORIAN’S LENS: Two Excavators, Legend, and Archaeology 87
         Minoan Pottery 89
         Carved Minoan Stone Vessels 90
         Late Minoan Art 92
         MYCENAEAN ART 93
         Architecture: Citadels 93
         Mycenaean Tombs and Their Contents 96
         Sculpture 99
         Chapter 5: Greek Art
         THE EMERGENCE OF GREEK ART: THE GEOMETRIC STYLE 104
         INFORMING ART: Greek Gods and Goddesses 105
         Geometric Style Pottery 105
         Geometric Style Sculpture 107
         THE ORIENTALIZING STYLE: HORIZONS EXPAND 107
         Miniature Vessels 108
         ARCHAIC ART: ART OF THE CITY-STATE 109
         The Rise of Monumental Temple Architecture 109
         STONE SCULPTURE 113
         Architectural Sculpture: The Building Comes Alive 115
         Vase Painting: Art of the Symposium 119
         THE CLASSICAL AGE 123
         Classical Sculpture 123
         MATERIALS AND TECHNIQUES: The Indirect Lost-Wax Process 128
         Architecture and Sculpture on the Athenian Akropolis 131
         PRIMARY SOURCES: Aristotle (384—322 BCE) 133
         THE ART HISTORIAN’S LENS: Repatriation of Cultural Heritage 134
         PRIMARY SOURCES: Plutarch (ca. 46—after 119 CE) 136
         THE LATE CLASSICAL PERIOD 141
         Late Classical Architecture: Civic and Sacred 141
         Late Classical sculpture 142
         Painting in the Late Classical Age 145
         THE AGE OF ALEXANDER AND THE HELLENISTIC PERIOD 147
         Architecture: The Scholarly Tradition and Theatricality 148
         City Planning 150
         Hellenistic Sculpture: Expression and Movement 154
         THE ART HISTORIAN’S LENS: J.J. Winckelmann and the Apollo Belvedere 157
         Hellenistic Painting 161
         Chapter 6: Etruscan Art
         FUNERARY ART 165
         Tombs and Their Contents 166
         MATERIALS AND TECHNIQUES: Etruscan Gold-Working 169
         ARCHITECTURE 173
         City Planning 174
         SCULPTURE 175
         Dynamism in Terra Cotta and Bronze 175
         Chapter 7: Roman Art
         EARLY ROME AND THE REPUBLIC 181
         THE ART HISTORIAN’S LENS: Recognizing Copies: The Case of the Laocoön 183
         NEW DIRECTIONS IN ARCHITECTURE 183
         Sculpture 188
         PRIMARY SOURCES: Cicero (106—43 BCE) 192
         MATERIALS AND TECHNIQUES: Copying Greek Sculptures 193
         Painting and Mosaic 194
         PRIMARY SOURCES: Polybius (ca. 200—ca. 118 BCE) 194
         THE EARLY EMPIRE 195
         Architecture 196
         THE ART HISTORIAN’S LENS: Two Pantheon Problems 202
         Portrait Sculpture 203
         Relief Sculpture 207
         PRIMARY SOURCES: Josephus (37/8—ca. 100 CE) 210
         Art and Architecture in the Provinces 213
         Domestic Art and Architecture 216
         THE LATE EMPIRE 222
         Architecture 222
         MATERIALS AND TECHNIQUES: Painted Stone in Greece and Rome 223
         Architecture in the Provinces 227
         Portrait Sculpture 228
         Relief Sculpture 229
         PART TWO: THE MIDDLE AGES
         Chapter 8: Early Jewish, Early Christian, and Byzantine Art
         EARLY JEWISH ART 237
         EARLY CHRISTIAN ART 240
         Christian Art before Constantine 240
         INFORMING ART: The Life of Jesus 241
         PRIMARY SOURCES: The Book of the Popes (Liber Pontificalis) 244
         Christian Art after Official Recognition of Christianity 245
         MATERIALS AND TECHNIQUES: Mosaics 248
         BYZANTINE ART 254
         Early Byzantine Art 254
         PRIMARY SOURCES: Procopius of Caesarea (Sixth Century) 258
         The Iconoclastic Controversy 265
         Middle Byzantine Art 265
         PRIMARY SOURCES: St. Theodore the Studite (759—826 CE) 266
         Late Byzantine Art 273
         INFORMING ART: Biblical and Celestial Beings 273
         Chapter 9: Islamic Art
         Religious Architecture 280
         PRIMARY SOURCES: Muhammad Ibn Mahmud Al-Amuli (Iran, 14th Century) 280
         THE FORMATION OF ISLAMIC ART 281
         INFORMING ART: Islam and Its Messenger 283
         Secular Architecture 284
         THE DEVELOPMENT OF ISLAMIC STYLE 285
         Religious Architecture 285
         Luxury Arts 287
         ISLAMIC ART AND THE PERSIAN INHERITANCE 287
         Architecture 287
         Figural Art Forms in Iran 288
         THE CLASSICAL AGE 290
         THE ART HISTORIAN’S LENS: Spanish Islamic Art and Europe in the Middle Ages 290
         The Fatimid Artistic Impact 291
         The Ayyubids and the Seljuk Turks of Asia Minor 292
         LATER CLASSICAL ART AND ARCHITECTURE 294
         Mongol Patronage 295
         Timurid Patronage 295
         Mamluk Patronage 296
         Nasrid Patronage: The Alhambra 299
         THE THREE LATE EMPIRES 300
         PRIMARY SOURCES: The Ottoman Sultan Selim II (1524—1574) 300
         MATERIALS AND TECHNIQUES: The Oriental Carpet 301
         The Ottomans in Europe and Asia 302
         The Safavid Period in Iran 304
         The Mughal Period in India 308
         PRIMARY SOURCES: Abd Al-Hamid Lahori (d. 1654) 309
         CONTINUITY AND CHANGE IN ISLAMIC ART 310
         Chapter 10: Early Medieval Art
         ANGLO-SAXON ART 314
         MATERIALS AND TECHNIQUES: Metalwork 315
         The Animal Style 316
         HIBERNO-SAXON ART 318
         Manuscripts 318
         PRIMARY SOURCES: Lindisfarne Gospels 320
         VIKING ART 322
         CAROLINGIAN ART 324
         Sculpture 324
         Illuminated Books 325
         Architecture 328
         PRIMARY SOURCES: Hariulf (ca.1060—1143) 331
         PRIMARY SOURCES: St. Angilbert (ca. 750—814) 332
         OTTONIAN ART 333
         Architecture 333
         Metalwork 336
         Ivories and Manuscripts: Conveyors of Imperial Grandeur 340
         Sculpture 343
         Chapter 11: Romanesque Art
         FIRST EXPRESSIONS OF ROMANESQUE STYLE 349
         Architecture 349
         Monumental Stone Sculpture 350
         MATURE ROMANESQUE 351
         Pilgrimage Churches and Their Art 351
         PRIMARY SOURCES: The Pilgrim’s Guide 352
         Cluniac Architecture and Sculpture 356
         PRIMARY SOURCES: St. Bernard of Clairvaux (1090—1153) 359
         Cluniac Wall Painting 365
         Cistercian Architecture and Art 366
         Other Benedictine Architecture and Wall Painting 367
         Book Illustration 368
         THE ART HISTORIAN’S LENS: Preserving and Restoring Architecture 369
         OTHER REGIONAL VARIANTS OF ROMANESQUE STYLE 372
         Western France: Poitou 372
         Southeastern France: Provence 373
         The Holy Land 374
         Tuscany 375
         Germany 378
         The Meuse Valley: Mosan Style 379
         MATERIALS AND TECHNIQUES: Vaulting 380
         Normandy and England 381
         THE PARADOXICAL MEANING OF ROMANESQUE 386
         Chapter 12: Gothic Art
         EARLY GOTHIC ART IN FRANCE 391
         Saint-Denis: Suger and the Beginnings of Gothic Architecture 391
         PRIMARY SOURCES: Suger of Saint-Denis (1081—1151) 393
         Chartres Cathedral 395
         Laon Cathedral 397
         Cathedral of Notre-Dame in Paris 398
         HIGH GOTHIC ART IN FRANCE 399
         The Rebuilding of Chartres Cathedral 400
         PRIMARY SOURCES: Theophilus Presbyter (12th Century) 402
         MATERIALS AND TECHNIQUES: Stained Glass 405
         THE ART HISTORIAN’S LENS: Modules and Proportions 406
         Amiens Cathedral 408
         Reims Cathedral 408
         RAYONNANT OR COURT STYLE 413
         Sainte-Chapelle 413
         Saint-Urbain in Troyes 415
         Manuscript Illumination 416
         LATE GOTHIC ART IN FRANCE 418
         Manuscript Illumination 418
         Sculpture 420
         Architecture: The Flamboyant Phase 422
         THE SPREAD OF GOTHIC ART 423
         Spain 423
         England 426
         Germany 430
         PART THREE: THE RENAISSANCE THROUGH ROCOCO
         Chapter 13: Art in Thirteenth- and Fourteenth-Century Italy
         THE GROWTH OF MENDICANT ORDERS AND THE VISUAL ARTS IN ITALY 438
         The Franciscans at Assisi and Florence 438
         Churches and Their Furnishings in Urban Centers 441
         MATERIALS AND TECHNIQUES: Fresco Painting and Conservation 441
         Pulpits in Pisan Churches 442
         Expanding Florence Cathedral 445
         Building for the City Government: The Palazzo della Signoria 448
         PAINTING IN TUSCANY 449
         Cimabue and Giotto 449
         Siena: Devotion to Mary in Works by Duccio and Simone 453
         PRIMARY SOURCES: Agnolo di Tura del Grasso 454
         THE ART HISTORIAN’S LENS: The Social Work of Images 455
         Pietro and Ambrogio Lorenzetti 458
         Artists and Patrons in Times of Crisis 461
         PRIMARY SOURCES: Inscriptions on the Frescoes in the Palazzo Pubblico, Siena 461
         NORTHERN ITALY 465
         Venice: Political Stability and Sumptuous Architecture 465
         Milan: The Visconti Family and Northern Influences 465
         Chapter 14: Artistic Innovations in Fifteenth-Century Northern Europe
         COURTLY ART: THE INTERNATIONAL GOTHIC 471
         Sculpture for the French Royal Family 471
         Illuminated Manuscripts: Books of Hours 473
         Bohemia and England 474
         URBAN CENTERS AND THE NEW ART 476
         Robert Campin in Tournai 477
         Jan van Eyck in Bruges 479
         MATERIALS AND TECHNIQUES: Panel Painting in Tempera and Oil 479
         Rogier van der Weyden in Brussels 485
         PRIMARY SOURCES: Cyriacus of Ancona (1449) 485
         LATE FIFTEENTH-CENTURY ART IN THE NETHERLANDS 487
         Aristocratic Tastes for Precious Objects, Personal Books, and Tapestries 487
         THE ART HISTORIAN’S LENS: Scientific and Technical Study of Paintings 488
         Panel Paintings in the Southern Netherlands 490
         The Northern Netherlands 492
         REGIONAL RESPONSES TO THE EARLY NETHERLANDISH STYLE 494
         France 494
         PRIMARY SOURCES: Fray José De Sigüenza (1544?—1606) 494
         Spain 495
         Central Europe 495
         PRIMARY SOURCES: From the Contract for the St. Wolfgang Altarpiece 499
         PRINTING AND THE GRAPHIC ARTS 499
         Printing Centers in Colmar and Basel 501
         MATERIALS AND TECHNIQUES: Printmaking 501
         Chapter 15: The Early Renaissance in Fifteenth-Century Italy
         FLORENCE IN THE FIFTEENTH CENTURY 507
         The Baptistery Competition 507
         PRIMARY SOURCES: In Praise of the City of Florence (ca. 1403—04) by Leonardo Bruni 507
         Architecture and Antiquity in Florence 509
         PRIMARY SOURCES: Lorenzo Ghiberti (ca. 1381—1455) 509
         MATERIALS AND TECHNIQUES: Brunelleschi’s Dome 512
         PRIMARY SOURCES: Leon Battista Alberti on what makes a building beautiful 514
         Ancient Inspirations in Florentine Sculpture 515
         MATERIALS AND TECHNIQUES: Perspective 516
         Painting in Florentine Churches and Chapels 525
         THE ART HISTORIAN’S LENS: Patronage Studies 525
         Florentine Painters in the Age of the Medici 530
         DOMESTIC LIFE: PALACES, FURNISHINGS,
         AND PAINTINGS IN MEDICEAN FLORENCE 533
         Palace Architecture 533
         PRIMARY SOURCES: Domenico Veneziano Solicits Work 534
         Paintings for Palaces 536
         PRIMARY SOURCES: Giovanni Dominici Urges Parents to Put Religious Images in Their Homes 539
         Portraiture 541
         RENAISSANCE ART THROUGHOUT ITALY, 1450—1500 543
         Piero della Francesca in Central Italy 543
         Alberti and Mantegna in Mantua 546
         Venice 550
         Rome and the Papal States 553
         Chapter 16: The High Renaissance in Italy, 1495—1520
         THE HIGH RENAISSANCE IN FLORENCE AND MILAN 558
         Leonardo da Vinci in Florence 559
         Leonardo in Milan 559
         PRIMARY SOURCES: Leonardo da Vinci (1452—1519) 562
         Leonardo Back in Florence and Elsewhere 564
         ROME RESURGENT 566
         Bramante in Rome 566
         Michelangelo in Rome and Florence 568
         PRIMARY SOURCES: Michelangelo Interprets the Vatican Pietà 568
         Michelangelo in the Service of Pope Julius II 571
         MATERIALS AND TECHNIQUES: Drawings 575
         Raphael in Florence and Rome 577
         THE ART HISTORIAN’S LENS: Cleaning and Restoring Works of Art 578
         PRIMARY SOURCES: On Raphael’s Death 583
         VENICE 584
         Giorgione 584
         Titian 585
         Chapter 17: The Late Renaissance and Mannerism in Sixteenth-Century Italy
         LATE RENAISSANCE FLORENCE: THE CHURCH, THE COURT, AND MANNERISM 593
         Florentine Religious Painting in the 1520s 593
         The Medici in Florence: From Dynasty to Duchy 595
         PRIMARY SOURCES: Benvenuto Cellini (1500—1571) 600
         ROME REFORMED 603
         Michelangelo in Rome 603
         PRIMARY SOURCES: Michelangelo the Poet 603
         The Catholic Reformation and Il Gesù 607
         NORTHERN ITALY: DUCAL COURTS AND URBAN CENTERS 609
         The Palazzo del Te 609
         PARMA AND CREMONA 611
         Correggio and Parmigianino in Parma 611
         Cremona 613
         VENICE: THE SERENE REPUBLIC 613
         Sansovino in Venice 613
         Andrea Palladio and Late Renaissance Architecture 614
         PRIMARY SOURCES: Andrea Palladio (1508—1580) 616
         Titian 617
         MATERIALS AND TECHNIQUES: Oil on Canvas 618
         PRIMARY SOURCES: From a Session of the Inquisition Tribunal in Venice of Paolo Veronese 620
         Titian’s Legacy 621
         Chapter 18: Renaissance and Reformation in Sixteenth-Century Northern Europe
         FRANCE: COURTLY TASTES FOR ITALIAN FORMS 625
         Chateaux and Palaces: Translating Italian Architecture 626
         Art for Castle Interiors 628
         MATERIALS AND TECHNIQUES: Making and Conserving Renaissance Tapestries 629
         SPAIN: GLOBAL POWER AND RELIGIOUS ORTHODOXY 631
         The Escorial 632
         El Greco and Religious Painting in Spain 633
         CENTRAL EUROPE: THE REFORMATION AND ART 634
         Catholic Contexts: The Isenheim Altarpiece 635
         Albrecht Dürer and the Northern Renaissance 638
         PRIMARY SOURCES: Albrecht Dürer (1471—1528) 641
         Religious and Courtly Images in the Era of Reform 643
         Painting in the Cities: Humanist Themes and Religious Turmoil 646
         ENGLAND: REFORMATION AND POWER 647
         PRIMARY SOURCES: Elizabethan Imagery 649
         THE NETHERLANDS: WORLD MARKETPLACE 650
         The City and the Court: David and Gossaert 651
         THE ART HISTORIAN’S LENS: The Economics of Art 651
         Antwerp: Merchants, Markets, and Morality 652
         PRIMARY SOURCES: Karel van Mander Writes About Pieter Bruegel the Elder 656
         Chapter 19: The Baroque in Italy and Spain
         PAINTING IN ITALY 663
         Caravaggio and the New Style 664
         Artemisia Gentileschi 667
         PRIMARY SOURCES: Artemisia Gentileschi (1593—ca. 1653) 669
         Ceiling Painting and Annibale Carracci 670
         ARCHITECTURE IN ITALY 675
         The Completion of St. Peter’s and Carlo Maderno 675
         Bernini and St. Peter’s 676
         Architectural Components in Decoration 678
         A Baroque Alternative: Francesco Borromini 679
         The Baroque in Turin: Guarino Guarini 682
         The Baroque in Venice: Baldassare Longhena 684
         SCULPTURE IN ITALY 684
         Early Baroque Sculpture: Stefano Maderno 684
         The Evolution of the Baroque: Gianlorenzo Bernini 684
         A Classical Alternative: Alessandro Algardi 687
         MATERIALS AND TECHNIQUES: Bernini’s Sculptural Sketches 688
         PAINTING IN SPAIN 689
         Spanish Still Life: Juan Sánchez Cotán 690
         Naples and the Impact of Caravaggio: Jusepe de Ribera 690
         Diego Velázquez: From Seville to Court Painter 691
         Monastic Orders and Zurbarán 695
         PRIMARY SOURCES: Antonio Palomino (1655—1726) 695
         Culmination in Devotion: Bartolomé Esteban Murillo 696
         Chapter 20: The Baroque in the Netherlands
         FLANDERS 701
         Peter Paul Rubens and Defining the Baroque 701
         PRIMARY SOURCES: Peter Paul Rubens (1577—1640) 704
         Anthony van Dyck: History and Portraiture at the English Court 707
         Local Flemish Art and Jacob Jordaens 708
         The Bruegel Tradition 709
         Still-Life Painting 710
         THE DUTCH REPUBLIC 713
         The Haarlem Academy: Hendrick Goltzius 713
         The Caravaggisti in Holland: Hendrick Terbrugghen 713
         The Haarlem Community and Frans Hals 714
         The Next Generation in Haarlem: Judith Leyster 717
         Rembrandt and the Art of Amsterdam 718
         THE ART HISTORIAN’S LENS: Authenticity and Workshops: Rubens and Rembrandt 718
         MATERIALS AND TECHNIQUES: Etching, Drypoint, and Selective Wiping 722
         THE LANDSCAPE, STILL-LIFE, AND GENRE PAINTING 725
         Landscape Painting: Jan van Goyen 725
         City Views: Jacob van Ruisdael 726
         Architectural Painting: Pieter Saenredam 728
         Still-life Painting: Willem Claesz. Heda 729
         Flower Painting: Rachel Ruysch 730
         Genre Painting: Jan Steen 730
         Intimate Genre Painting: Jan Vermeer 732
         Exquisite Genre Painting: Gerard ter Borch 734
         Chapter 21: The Baroque in France and England
         FRANCE: THE STYLE OF LOUIS XIV 738
         Painting and Printmaking in France 739
         PRIMARY SOURCES: Nicolas Poussin (ca. 1594—1665) 742
         THE ART HISTORIAN’S LENS: Forgeries and The Book of Truth 747
         French Classical Architecture 748
         Sculpture: The Impact of Bernini 754
         BAROQUE ARCHITECTURE IN ENGLAND 754
         Inigo Jones and the Impact of Palladio 755
         Sir Christopher Wren 757
         John Vanbrugh and Nicholas Hawksmoor 760
         Chapter 22: The Rococo
         FRANCE: THE RISE OF THE ROCOCO 762
         Painting: Poussinistes versus Rubénistes 763
         PRIMARY SOURCES: Jean de Jullienne (1686—1767) 766
         MATERIALS AND TECHNIQUES: Pastel Painting 769
         Chinoiserie 771
         The French Rococo Interior 772
         THE ROCOCO IN WESTERN EUROPE OUTSIDE OF FRANCE 774
         William Hogarth and the Narrative 774
         Canaletto 775
         THE ROCOCO IN CENTRAL EUROPE 776
         Johann Fischer von Erlach 777
         Egid Quirin Asam 779
         Dominikus Zimmermann 779
         Balthasar Neumann 780
         Giovanni Battista Tiepolo and Illusionistic Ceiling Decoration 781
         PART FOUR: THE MODERN WORLD
         Chapter 23: Art in the Age of the Enlightenment, 1750—1789
         ROME TOWARD 1760: THE FONT OF NEOCLASSICISM 787
         Artistic Foundations of Neoclassicism: Mengs and Hamilton 788
         ROMANTICISM IN ROME: PIRANESI 789
         NEOCLASSICISM IN BRITAIN 790
         Sculpture and Painting: Historicism, Morality, and Antiquity 791
         MATERIALS AND TECHNIQUES: Josiah Wedgwood and Neoclassical Jasperware 792
         The Birth of Contemporary History Painting 793
         Grand Manner Portraiture in the Neoclassical Style: Joshua Reynolds 795
         THE ART HISTORIAN’S LENS: The Elusive Meaning of West’s The Death of General Wolfe 795
         Architecture and Interiors: The Palladian Revival 796
         EARLY ROMANTICISM IN BRITAIN 798
         Architecture and Landscape Design: The Sublime and the Picturesque 799
         Early Romantic Painting in Britain 801
         Romanticism in Grand Manner Portraiture: Thomas Gainsborough 805
         NEOCLASSICISM IN FRANCE 806
         Architecture: Rational Classicism 806
         The Sublime in Neoclassical Architecture: The Austere and the Visionary 808
         Painting and Sculpture: Expressing Enlightenment Values 810
         PRIMARY SOURCES: Denis Diderot (1713—1784) 812
         The Climax of Neoclassicism: The Paintings of Jacques-Louis David 813
         PRIMARY SOURCES: Étienne-Jean Delécluze (1781—1863) 813
         Neoclassical Portraiture: Marie-Louise-Élisabeth Vigée-Lebrun 816
         ITALIAN NEOCLASSICISM TOWARD 1785 817
         Neoclassical Sculpture: Antonio Canova 817
         Chapter 24: Art in the Age of Romanticism, 1789—1848
         PAINTING 823
         Spain: Francisco Goya 823
         Britain: Spiritual Intensity and the Bond with Nature 825
         MATERIALS AND TECHNIQUES: Blake’s Printing Process 827
         PRIMARY SOURCES: John Constable (1776—1837) 829
         Germany: Friedrich’s Pantheistic Landscape 831
         America: Landscape as Metaphor 832
         France: Neoclassical Romanticism 835
         France: Painterly Romanticism and Romantic Landscape 840
         PRIMARY SOURCES: Eugène Delacroix (1798—1863) 845
         Romantic Landscape Painting 847
         ROMANTIC SCULPTURE 850
         ROMANTIC REVIVALS IN ARCHITECTURE 851
         Britain: The Sublime and the Picturesque 851
         Germany: Creating a New Athens 854
         America: An Ancient Style for a New Republic 854
         France: Empire Style 856
         Chapter 25: The Age of Positivism: Realism, Impressionism, and the Pre-Raphaelites, 1848—1885
         REALISM IN FRANCE 860
         Realism in the 1840s and 1850s: Painting Contemporary Social Conditions 861
         The Realist Assault on Academic Values and Bourgeois Taste 866
         Impressionism: A Different Form of Realism 871
         PRIMARY SOURCES: Lila Cabot Perry (1848?—1933) 872
         MATERIALS AND TECHNIQUES: Impressionist Color Theory 874
         BRITISH REALISM 881
         The Pre-Raphaelite Brotherhood 881
         The Aesthetic Movement: Personal Psychology and Repressed Eroticism 884
         PRIMARY SOURCES: James Abbott McNeill Whistler (1834—1903) 885
         REALISM IN AMERICA 887
         Scientific Realism: Thomas Eakins 887
         Iconic Imagery: Winslow Homer 888
         THE ART HISTORIAN’S LENS: An Artist's Reputation and Changes in Art Historical Methodology 889
         PHOTOGRAPHY: A MECHANICAL MEDIUM FOR MASS-PRODUCED ART 890
         First Innovations 891
         Recording the World 891
         Reporting the News: Photojournalism 894
         Photography as Art: Pictorialism and Combination Printing 895
         PRIMARY SOURCES: Charles Baudelaire (1821—1867) 896
         ARCHITECTURE AND THE INDUSTRIAL REVOLUTION 897
         Ferrovitreous Structures: Train Sheds and Exhibition Palaces 898
         Historic Eclecticism and Technology 899
         Announcing the Future: The Eiffel Tower 900
         Chapter 26: Progress and Its Discontents: Post-Impressionism, Symbolism, and Art Nouveau, 1880—1905
         POST-IMPRESSIONISM 905
         Paul Cézanne: Toward Abstraction 905
         PRIMARY SOURCES: Paul Cézanne (1839—1906) 907
         Georges Seurat: Seeking Social and Pictorial Harmony 908
         Henri de Toulouse-Lautrec: An Art for the Demimonde 911
         MATERIALS AND TECHNIQUES: Lithography 911
         Vincent van Gogh: Expression Through Color and Symbol 912
         Paul Gauguin: The Flight from Modernity 915
         PRIMARY SOURCES: Paul Gauguin (1848—1903) 917
         SYMBOLISM 917
         The Nabis 917
         Other Symbolist Visions in France 918
         Symbolism Beyond France 920
         Symbolist Currents in American Art 922
         THE ART HISTORIAN’S LENS: Feminist Art History 923
         The Sculpture of Rodin 924
         ART NOUVEAU AND THE SEARCH FOR MODERN DESIGN 927
         The Public and Private Spaces of Art Nouveau 927
         AMERICAN ARCHITECTURE: THE CHICAGO SCHOOL 931
         Henry Hobson Richardson: Laying the Foundation for Modernist Architecture 931
         Louis Sullivan and Early Skyscrapers 932
         Frank Lloyd Wright and the Prairie House 934
         PHOTOGRAPHY AND THE ADVENT OF FILM 936
         Pictorialist Photography and the Photo Secession 936
         Documentary Photography 939
         Motion Photography and Moving Pictures 940
         Chapter 27: Toward Abstraction: The Modernist Revolution, 1904—1914
         FAUVISM 946
         CUBISM 950
         Reflecting and Shattering Tradition: Les Demoiselles d’Avignon 950
         THE ART HISTORIAN’S LENS: The Myth of the Primitive 951
         Analytic Cubism: Picasso and Braque 952
         Synthetic Cubism: The Power of Collage 953
         THE IMPACT OF FAUVISM AND CUBISM 955
         German Expressionism 955
         MATERIALS AND TECHNIQUES: The Woodcut in German Expressionism 958
         PRIMARY SOURCES: Vasily Kandinsky (1866—1944) 960
         Austrian Expressionism 962
         Cubism after Picasso and Braque: Paris 963
         Italian Futurism: The Visualization of Movement and Energy 964
         Cubo-Futurism and Suprematism in Russia 966
         PRIMARY SOURCES: Kazimir Malevich (1878—1935) 968
         Cubism and Fantasy: Marc Chagall and Giorgio de Chirico 969
         MARCEL DUCHAMP AND THE ADVENT OF AN ART OF IDEAS 970
         CONSTANTIN BRANCUSI AND THE BIRTH OF MODERNIST SCULPTURE 972
         AMERICAN ART 974
         America’s First Modernists: Arthur Dove and Marsden Hartley 975
         EARLY MODERN ARCHITECTURE IN EUROPE 976
         Austrian and German Modernist Architecture 976
         German Expressionist Architecture 979
         Chapter 28: Art Between the Wars
         DADA 985
         Zurich Dada: Jean Arp 985
         New York Dada: Marcel Duchamp 986
         Berlin Dada 987
         Cologne Dada 991
         PRIMARY SOURCES: Hannah Höch (1889—1978) 991
         Paris Dada: Man Ray 992
         SURREALISM 993
         Picasso and Surrealism 993
         Surrealism in Paris: Spurring the Imagination 995
         Representational Surrealism: Magritte and Dalí 996
         Surrealism and Photography 999
         The Surrealist Object 999
         ORGANIC SCULPTURE OF THE 1930S 1000
         Alexander Calder in Paris 1001
         Henry Moore and Barbara Hepworth in England 1002
         PRIMARY SOURCES: Barbara Hepworth (1903—1975) 1003
         CREATING UTOPIAS 1003
         Russian Constructivism: Productivism and Utilitarianism 1003
         De Stijl and Universal Order 1005
         The Bauhaus: Creating the “New Man” 1007
         PRIMARY SOURCES: Piet Mondrian (1872—1944) 1007
         The Machine Aesthetic in Paris 1011
         PRIMARY SOURCES: Le Corbusier (1886—1965) 1012
         MATERIALS AND TECHNIQUES: Reinforced Concrete 1013
         ART IN AMERICAN: MODERNITY, SPIRITUALITY, AND REGIONALISM 1015
         The City and Industry 1015
         Art Deco and the International Style 1020
         Seeking the Spiritual 1021
         Regionalism and National Identity 1023
         The Harlem Renaissance 1024
         MEXICAN ART: SEEKING A NATIONAL IDENTITY 1025
         Diego Rivera 1025
         THE EVE OF WORLD WAR II 1028
         America: The Failure of Modernity 1028
         Europe: The Rise of Fascism 1030
         Chapter 29: Postwar to Postmodern, 1945—1980
         EXISTENTIALISM IN NEW YORK: ABSTRACT EXPRESSIONISM 1036
         The Bridge from Surrealism to Abstract Expressionism: Arshile Gorky 1036
         Abstract Expressionism: Action Painting 1038
         PRIMARY SOURCES: Jackson Pollock (1912—1956) 1038
         Abstract Expressionism: Color-Field Painting 1040
         New York Sculpture: David Smith and Louise Nevelson 1041
         EXISTENTIALISM IN EUROPE: FIGURAL EXPRESSIONISM 1042
         Jean Dubuffet 1042
         Francis Bacon 1043
         REJECTING ABSTRACT EXPRESSIONISM: AMERICAN ART OF THE 1950s AND 1960s 1044
         Re-Presenting Life and Dissecting Painting 1044
         Environments and Performance Art 1046
         Pop Art: Consumer Culture as Subject 1049
         PRIMARY SOURCES: Roy Lichtenstein (1923—1997) 1050
         FORMALIST ABSTRACTION OF THE 1950s AND 1960s 1053
         Formalist Painting 1053
         Formalist Sculpture: Minimal Art 1056
         PRIMARY SOURCES: Frank Stella (b. 1936) 1056
         THE PLURALIST 1970s: POST-MINIMALISM 1058
         Post-Minimal Sculpture: Geometry and Emotion 1058
         Earthworks and Site-Specific Art 1059
         THE ART HISTORIAN’S LENS: Studying the Absent Object 1059
         Conceptual Art: Art as Idea 1062
         Television Art: Nam June Paik 1063
         ART WITH A SOCIAL AGENDA 1064
         Street Photography 1064
         African-American Art: Ethnic Identity 1065
         PRIMARY SOURCES: Romare Bearden (1911—1988) 1066
         Feminist Art: Judy Chicago and Gender Identity 1068
         LATE MODERNIST ARCHITECTURE 1069
         Continuing the International Style: Ludwig Mies van der Rohe 1069
         Sculptural Architecture: Referential Mass 1070
         Chapter 30: The Postmodern Era: Art Since 1980
         ARCHITECTURE 1077
         Postmodern Architecture: A Referential Style 1077
         New Modernisms: High-Tech Architecture 1080
         Deconstructivism: Countering Modernist Authority 1082
         MATERIALS AND TECHNIQUES: Computer-Aided Design in Architecture 1085
         POSTMINIMALISM AND PLURALISM: LIMITLESS POSSIBILITIES IN FINE ART 1085
         The Return of Painting 1085
         Sculpture 1089
         APPROPRIATION ART: DECONSTRUCTING IMAGES 1091
         PRIMARY SOURCES: Cindy Sherman (b. 1954) 1091
         Photography and LED Signs 1092
         Context and Meaning in Art: The Institutional Critique and Art as Commodity 1094
         MULTICULTURALISM AND POLITICAL ART 1096
         African-American Identity 1096
         The AIDS Pandemic and a Preoccupation with the Body 1098
         The Power of Installation, Video, and Large-Scale Photography 1100
         PRIMARY SOURCES: Ilya Kabakov (b. 1933) 1102
         THE ART HISTORIAN’S LENS: The Changing Art Market 1104
         GLOBAL ART 1105
         El Anatsui, Adinkra Signs, and Postmodern Ambiguity 1105
         Cai Guo Qing: Projects for Extraterrestrials 1106
         Glossary
         Bibliography
         Index
         Credits
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