Nature's Truth
Photography, Painting, and Science in Victorian Britain
Format:Hardback
Publisher:Pennsylvania State University Press
Published:24th Aug '16
Currently unavailable, and unfortunately no date known when it will be back
This insightful examination of art and science in the nineteenth century reveals how Nature's Truth reshaped modern British artistic practices and concepts of truth.
This book delves into the motivations behind the work of nineteenth-century British painters and photographers, including notable figures like the Pre-Raphaelites, P. H. Emerson, and Augustus John. It explores their pursuit of 'truth to nature' and how contemporary scientific and philosophical ideas influenced their artistic practices and the reception of their work. 'Truth to Nature' emerged as a significant concept during this era, uniting a diverse group of artists and critics who aimed to reform art-making in Great Britain.
To grasp the essence of 'truth,' these artists engaged with the burgeoning fields of science, which provided fresh perspectives on physical phenomena, vision, and perception. By examining a wide range of sources, including artists' correspondence and scientific writings, Nature's Truth highlights the intricate relationship between art and science throughout the nineteenth century. Helmreich illustrates how these disciplines became intertwined as artists endeavored to keep art relevant amid rapid scientific and technological advancements.
Despite a shared commitment to the idea of 'truth to nature,' the British art community faced significant disagreements over its definition and representation. As the early twentieth century approached, the unifying concept began to lose its hold on the reform movement. Nevertheless, Nature's Truth reveals the lasting impact this movement had on modern British art, offering a thought-provoking analysis of evolving ideas about truth and the significance of art in contemporary society.
“Nature’s Truth is essential reading for scholars of British art and modernism. Perhaps more, it adds to the growing literature delving into intersections among the arts and sciences in the nineteenth century and evaluating the complex intellectual networks in which art objects are produced.”
—Sarah Gordon caa.reviews
“The triad of painting, science, and photography has long been recognized as a major preoccupation in British culture of the Victorian period. The fact that it has taken so long for this to be adequately explained and elucidated speaks to the narrow preoccupations of art historians and the silo mentality of academic disciplines unwilling to embrace the fluidity among fields once mutually supportive of one another. Helmreich addresses the interrelationships of these activities with considerable sensitivity.”
—P. A. Stirton Choice
“Helmreich's call for interdisciplinary studies may not be new, but her statement recognizes the significance and the challenge of interdisciplinary scholarship. Nature’s Truth clearly demonstrates the value of such work.”
—Margaret J. Godbey Victorian Periodicals Review
“The overall scholarship and the wealth of information gathered make this a very valuable contribution to understanding the cultural dynamics of the long nineteenth century.”
—Catherine Phillips Journal of Pre-Raphaelite Studies
“Anne Helmreich’s Nature’s Truth is consistently illuminating, informed, and accessible; it is the best guide I know to the nineteenth-century passion for ‘truth to nature’ among artists and scientists alike. It is a pleasure to learn how artists from Talbot and Millais to the New English Art Club and the Camden Town circle strove to find ‘a solid basis for art in science.’”
—John Plotz, author of Portable Property: Victorian Culture on the Move
“In her fascinating and important book Nature’s Truth, Anne Helmreich discusses the group of artists, photographers, and scientists who believed that they could unite to explore the truth of nature. Even though this dynamic—and complicated—relationship between John Millais, John Brett, P. H. Emerson, and George Clausen and scientific figures such as T. H. Huxley, John Tyndall, Herbert Spencer, and G. H. Lewis did not survive past the early twentieth century, Helmreich reveals its lasting effect on modern art.”
—Bernard Lightman, vice president of the History of Science Society and author of Victorian Popularizers of Science: Designing Nature for New Audiences
“A must-read for those interested in nineteenth-century British landscape painting and photography! Anne Helmreich brilliantly argues that, much like science, landscape painting and photography in Britain from the 1830s until 1914 were driven by a belief in the importance of perception and the notion of ‘truth to nature.’ But as the meaning of that phrase changed, so did the art, until by 1914 the phrase itself had lost all meaning for artists.”
—Petra ten-Doesschate Chu, author of Nineteenth-Century European Art
“Anne Helmreich’s brilliant new book makes us rethink Victorian art, the development of British artistic modernism, and the history of visual perception. Returning us to a time when art and science worked closely in dialogue, Helmreich eloquently traces the changing meanings of ‘truth to nature’—objective, factual recording of detail, or subjective, imaginative response. Astute, detailed analysis of paintings and photographs combines with extensive reading in primary works, rendering this an original and illuminating study.”
—Kate Flint, author of The Victorians and the Visual Imagination
- Long-listed for Historians of British Art Book Prize 2017
ISBN: 9780271071145
Dimensions: 254mm x 229mm x 25mm
Weight: 1406g
264 pages