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Falling Rocket James Whistler John Ruskin And The Battle For Modern Art Murphy

  • SKU: BELL-54260968
Falling Rocket James Whistler John Ruskin And The Battle For Modern Art Murphy
$ 31.00 $ 45.00 (-31%)

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Falling Rocket James Whistler John Ruskin And The Battle For Modern Art Murphy instant download after payment.

Publisher: Pegasus Books
File Extension: PDF
File size: 42.17 MB
Pages: 400
Author: Murphy, Paul Thomas
ISBN: 9781639364916, 1639364919
Language: English
Year: 2023

Product desciption

Falling Rocket James Whistler John Ruskin And The Battle For Modern Art Murphy by Murphy, Paul Thomas 9781639364916, 1639364919 instant download after payment.

The untold story of the artistic battle between James Abbot MacNeill Whistler and John Ruskin over Whistler’s controversial, ground-breaking Nocturne in Black and Gold: The Falling Rocket. In November 1878, America’s greatest painter sued England’s greatest critic for a bad review. The painter won—but ruined himself in the process. The painter: James Abbot MacNeill Whistler, whose combination of incredible talent, unflagging energy, and relentless self-promotion had by that time brought him to the very edge of artistic preeminence. The critic: John Ruskin, Slade Professor of Art at Oxford University, whose four-decades’ worth of prolific and highly respected literary output on aesthetics had made him England’s unchallenged and seemingly unchallengeable arbiter of art. Though Whistler and Ruskin both lived in London and moved in the same artistic world, they had, until June, 1877, managed to remain entirely clear of one another. This was unusual because Whistler had a mercurial temperament, a belligerent personality, and seemed to thrive on opposition: he once challenged a man to a duel because the man accused the painter of sleeping with his wife. (Whistler had, in fact, slept with the man’s wife.) That November, John Ruskin walked into the Grosvenor Gallery’s new exhibition of art and gazed with horror upon Whistler’s Nocturne in Black and Gold: The Falling Rocket. The painting was Whistler’s interpretation of a fireworks display at a local pleasure garden. But to Ruskin it was nothing more than a chaotic, incomprehensible mess of bright spots upon dark masses: not art but its antithesis—a disturbing and disgusting assault upon everything he had ever written or taught on the subject. He quickly channeled that anger into a seething review. The internationally-reported, widely discussed, and hugely-entertaining trial that followed was a titanic battle between the opposing ideas and ideals of two larger-than-life personalities. For these two protagonists, Whistler v…

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