Art versus Industry?

New Perspectives on Visual and Industrial Cultures in Nineteenth-Century Britain

Rebecca Wade editor Gabriel Williams editor Kate Nichols editor

Format:Hardback

Publisher:Manchester University Press

Published:1st Feb '16

Currently unavailable, and unfortunately no date known when it will be back

Art versus Industry? cover

This book is about encounters between art and industry in nineteenth-century Britain. It looks beyond the oppositions established by later interpretations of the work of John Ruskin, William Morris and the Arts and Crafts movement to reveal surprising examples of collaboration – between artists, craftspeople, designers, inventors, curators, engineers and educators – during a crucial period in the formation of the cultural and commercial identity of Britain and its colonies. Across thirteen chapters by fourteen contributors, Art versus industry? explores such diverse subjects as the production of lace, the mechanical translation of sculpture, the display of stained glass, the use of the kaleidoscope in painting and pattern design, the emergence of domestic electric lighting and the development of art and design education and international exhibitions in India.

‘There is a substantial amount of significant new research on offer here, framed within a wide-ranging demonstration of the socio-political reach of contemporary design history. The authors are an interesting combination of curators and academic art historians, some well-established, others from a new generation of young scholars, and several with cross-disciplinary backgrounds.’
Brian Maidment, Liverpool John Moores University, Victorian Studies, Vol. 59, No. 4

ISBN: 9780719096464

Dimensions: 240mm x 170mm x 17mm

Weight: 644g

280 pages