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Period Band C

Victorian Sculpture

Tutor: Jason Edwards

Description

The aim of this module is to introduce students to the major trends in sculpture in Britain between the arrival of the Elgin Marbles in London and the death of Queen Victoria.

Sculpture could be found everywhere in Victorian Britain: in galleries, museums, and great exhibitions; in homes, parks, gardens and city squares; incorporated into a wide range of buildings, furnishings and other decorative objects; and depicted in a diverse array of other media. In spite of this, and while Victorian Studies has undergone a remarkable growth in the past two decades, with exhaustive research into many aspects of nineteenth-century British culture, scholars have almost entirely overlooked Victorian sculpture, perhaps the single most significant art form in Britain in this period. This module seeks to return Victorian sculpture to centre stage in discussions of nineteenth-century Britain, and to illuminate the complex ways in which it functioned, and continues to function, aesthetically, politically, socially and historiographically.

 

Objectives

By the end of the module, students should have acquired:

  • familiarity with a wide range of sculpture produced and exhibited in the period
  • an ability to relate works of sculpture to a broad range of cultural historical issues, and political agendas, such as race, gender, and sexuality; and to other visual, literary and scientific texts
  • an understanding of the main historiographical and theoretical approaches to the sculpture in this period, particularly its difficult position between eighteenth-century sculptural aesthetics and Modernism

Preliminary Reading

As you prepare for the course, think about some of the following issues:

  1. the relationship between form and materiality, meaning and matter; opticality, mass and tactility; plane, contour, multi-faciality, detail, relief and three-dimensionality;
  2. the question of ‘aura’ in relation to sculpture’s inherent reproducibility, workshop production, and status as a modern industrial medium;
  3. the particular problems of sculptural production, patronage and exhibition in the nineteenth century;
  4. the relationship of sculpture to literary narrative and the particular problems of sculptural ekphrasis;
  5. the diverse and changing languages of classicism informing the sculptural encounter deriving from the mid- to late-eighteenth century, and their ongoing mediation of baroque aesthetics;
  6. sculpture’s relation to other media and objects, especially industrial, decorative and applied arts objects;
  7. sculpture’s position in domestic, local, regional, national, cosmopolitan and imperial cultures;
  8. how we understand the ‘Victorian’ in Victorian sculpture, especially the questions of sentimentality, monumentality, sexual repression, and Victorian sculpture’s problematic status as ‘kitsch’;
  9. the question of sculptural modernity and Victorian sculpture’s position, as a foil, within the genealogy of modernism;
  10. the limitations and possibilities attendant upon the fact that most of our sculptural encounters this term will take place with monochrome photographs and engravings rather than with objects

 

  • Atterbury, Paul. The Parian Phenomenon: A Survey of Victorian Parian Porcelain Statuary and Busts (1989).
  • Barnes, John, ed. Pre-Raphaelite Sculpture: Nature and Imagination in British Sculpture 1848-1914 (1991).
  • Barnes, Richard. John Bell: The Sculptor’s Life and Works (1999).
  • Baxandall, Michael. The Limewood Sculptures of Renaissance Germany (1980).
  • Beattie, S. The New Sculpture (1983).
  • Berstein, Susan David and Elsie B. Michie, eds, Victorian Vulgarity: Taste in Verbal and Visual Culture (2009).
  • Chakravarty, Gautam. The Indian Mutiny and the British Imagination (2005).
  • Coutu, Joan. Persuasion and Propaganda: Monuments from the Eighteenth-Century British Empire (2006).
  • Craske, Matthew. ‘Reviving the ‘School of Phidias’: the Invention of a National ‘School of Sculpture’ in Britain (1780-1830), Visual Culture in Britain 7.2 (Winter 2006), 25-42.
  • Culme, John. Nineteenth Century Silver (1977).
  • Dehijia, Vidya. Delight in Design: Indian Silver for the Raj (2008).
  • Dorment, Richard. Alfred Gilbert: Sculptor and Goldsmith (1986).
  • Eastlake, Elizabeth. The Life of John Gibson, R.A. Sculptor (1870), 1-20, 168-94, 201-249.
  • Foucault, Michel. The History of Sexuality Vol 1 (1975).
  • ---. Discipline and Punish (1975).
  • Gerstein, Alexandra ed., Display and Displacement: Sculpture and the Pedestal from Renaissance to Post-Modern (2007).
  • Getsy, David. J. Body Doubles (2004).
  • Gilroy, Paul. The Black Atlantic: Modernity and Double Consciousness (1993).
  • Janson, Horst. Nineteenth Century Sculpture (1985), 240-49.
  • Johnson, Geraldine. Sculpture and Photography. Envisioning the Third Dimension (1998).
  • Markovits, Stefanie. The Crimean War in the British Imagination (2009).
  • National Portrait Gallery, Return to Life: A New Look at the Portrait Bust (2001).
  • Nelson, Charmaine. The Colour of Stone: Sculpting the Black Female Subject in Nineteenth-Century America (2007).
  • Penny, Nicholas. Church Monuments in Romantic England (1977).
  • Physick, John. The Wellington Memorial (1970).
  • Read, Benedict. Victorian Sculpture (1983).
  • Roach, Joseph. Cities of the Dead: Circum-Atlantic Performance (1996).
  • Rogers, L.R. Relief Sculpture (1974).
  • Ruskin, John. ‘On the Nature of Gothic’ (1853), The Stones of Venice and various editions of selected writings.
  • Trodd, Colin. eds, Victorian Culture and the Idea of the Grotesque (1999).
  • Wagner, Anne. ‘Rodin's Reputation’, in L. Hunt, ed., Eroticism and the Body Politic (1993), 191-242.
Eve at the Fountain, Edward Hodges Baily RA FRS (10 March 1788 - 22 May 1867)