Hubert Robert
Provides an analysis and interpretation of selected works by one of the most important eighteenth-century French artists. Examining four sets of pictures that involve multiple canvasses, Paula Rea Radisich discusses these works in the light of the architectural setting for which they were designed and the demands imposed by the patrons who commissioned them. Through this line of inquiry, she establishes the broader function and significance of art in pre-Revolutionary France, moving from the creation of the work of art to questions about its architectural and cultural setting. Considering issues of production and reception of artworks, this study also examines how the Revolution affected the iconography of Robert's late paintings.
- This is the first interpretative study of Hubert Robert's art in English
- Examines work in architectural and cultural context
Product details
October 1998Hardback
9780521593519
220 pages
262 × 186 × 20 mm
0.825kg
64 b/w illus.
Unavailable - out of print June 2003
Table of Contents
- 1. Introduction: Hubert Robert and la vie privée
- 2. Making conversation: Hubert Robert in the salon of Madame Geoffrin
- 3. Sanctifying circulation: Hubert Robert in the Archiepiscopal Palace of Rouen
- 4. Performing the libertine: Hubert Robert in the Bagatelle
- 5. Dining amid the ruins: Hubert Robert's Les Monuments de la France
- 6. Epilogue: Hubert Robert and the Revolution.