HomePolitics & Social Sciences BooksThe Empire of the Eye: Landscape Representation and American Cultural Politics, 1825-1875
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The Empire of the Eye: Landscape Representation and American Cultural Politics, 1825-1875

hardcoverJanuary 1, 1993
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ISBN-13: 9780801428302 ISBN-10: 0801428300
Binding
hardcover
Published
January 1, 1993
Weight
2.6 lbs

About this book

The great nineteenth-century American landscape paintings - panoramic visions of natural design - have long been interpreted as expressions of the very spirit of national expansionism. Surveying American landscape art in light of its political institutional and cultural history from the 1820s through the post-Civil War era Angela Miller profoundly alters our understanding of the genre. In this richly illustrated volume she shows how landscape paintings beyond reflecting the beauty and the power of nature served as a medium through which disquieting questions concerning the future of the new republic could be raised symbolically. Making use of a wide array of sources including diaries letters travel writings criticism and essays Miller illuminates the meaning of landscape images for nineteenth-century viewers. She reassesses the ideological influence of Thomas Cole on successive generations of artists and reinterprets the new types of national landscape that emerged among New York-based painters beginning in the 1840s. Miller offers fresh analyses of such key works as Coles View from Mount Holyoke Northampton Massachusetts (The Oxbow) (1836) Asher B. Durands Progress (1853) John Frederick Kensetts White Mountains - Mount Washington (1851) Frederic Churchs New England Scenery (1851) and Sanford Giffords Kauterskill Clove (1862). The cultural identity expressed by nationalist landscape painting she asserts was marked by competing commitments to region and nation by uncertainties over gender relations and by the paradox of a nature simultaneously invested with spiritual values and used to underwrite an ideology of progress. Enhanced by eight color plates and sixty-four black-and-white reproductions The Empire of the Eye represents a major contribution to American cultural studies and the history of landscape art.