E.A. Hornel: From Camera to Canvas

Jennifer Melville editor Ben Reiss editor Antonia Laurence-Allen editor

Format:Paperback

Publisher:Birlinn General

Published:5th Nov '20

£20.00

Available to order, but very limited on stock - if we have issues obtaining a copy, we will let you know.

E.A. Hornel: From Camera to Canvas cover

Photography was crucial for E. A. Hornel (1864–1933). From 1891 to the end of his career, he built up an extensive photographic collection that was key in making him a successful painter. By analysing this collection, we can examine his ways of working more closely and reveal the attitudes that lie behind his paintings. Of particular importance in this regard are the photographs he took or collected in Japan during his visit in 1893–94, and the experiences he had in the country.

This book focuses particularly on the Japanese aspect of Hornel’s photography collection. The book's contributors discuss Hornel's experiences in Japan in 1893–94, the photographs he collected there and the wider context in which he worked. By undertaking analysis of Hornel’s Japanese photographs – as well as his wider photographic collection, his paintings, his Japanese books and his home of Broughton House – the contributors explore how these elements subsequently affected everything from his way of painting to the design of his garden.

'Provides a fresh insight into a Scottish painter admired by many. Lavishly illustrated with many of Hornel’s best-known works and some less familiar. Readers with a specific interesting the history of art, photography and Scottish painting, meanwhile, will find this a book in which to immerse themselves'

-- David Pratt * Herald *

'Stylishly designed and accessibly written for a diverse readership, the book’s multi-authored and multi-disciplinary format presents a kaleidoscopic and authoritative perspective on British Japonisme at the turn of the 19th century'

* Journal of the Scottish Society of Art Histo

ISBN: 9781780276816

Dimensions: 275mm x 220mm x 15mm

Weight: 871g

160 pages