Results by Title   
3 books about Wood, Christopher S.
Sort by     
 

Albrecht Altdorfer and the Origins of Landscape
Christopher S. Wood
University of Chicago Press, 1993
Library of Congress ND588.A4W63 1993 | Dewey Decimal 759.3

In the early sixteenth century, Albrecht Altdorfer promoted landscape from its traditional role as background to its new place as the focal point of a picture. His paintings, drawings, and etchings appeared almost without warning and mysteriously disappeared from view just as suddenly. In Albrecht Altdorfer and the Origins of Landscape,Christopher S. Wood shows how Altdorfer transformed what had been the mere setting for sacred and historical figures into a principal venue for stylish draftsmanship and idiosyncratic painterly effects. At the same time, his landscapes offered a densely textured interpretation of that quintessentially German locus—the forest interior.
 
This revised and expanded second edition contains a new introduction, revised bibliography, and fifteen additional illustrations.
 
“Excellent illustrations . . . [and] detailed exuberant comments leave the reader in no doubt about Altdorfer’s brilliance and originality.”—Anthony Grafton, New York Review of Books
 
“A study that is bound to become a standard work.”—Independent on Sunday
 
“Sumptuous.”—Daily Telegraph
Expand Description

Albrecht Altdorfer and the Origins of Landscape: Revised and Expanded Second Edition
Christopher S. Wood
Reaktion Books, 2014

In the early sixteenth century, Albrecht Altdorfer promoted landscape from its traditional role as background to its new place as the focal point of a picture. His paintings, drawings, and etchings appeared almost without warning and mysteriously disappeared from view just as suddenly. In Albrecht Altdorfer and the Origins of Landscape, Christopher S. Wood shows how Altdorfer transformed what had been the mere setting for sacred and historical figures into a principal venue for stylish draftsmanship and idiosyncratic painterly effects. At the same time, his landscapes offered a densely textured interpretation of that quintessentially German locus—the forest interior.
 
This revised and expanded second edition contains a new introduction, revised bibliography, and fifteen additional illustrations.
Expand Description

Forgery, Replica, Fiction: Temporalities of German Renaissance Art
Christopher S. Wood
University of Chicago Press, 2008
Library of Congress N7480.W67 2008 | Dewey Decimal 709.4309024

Today we often identify artifacts with the period when they were made. In more traditional cultures, however, such objects as pictures, effigies, and buildings were valued not as much for their chronological age as for their perceived links to the remote origins of religions, nations, monasteries, and families. As a result, Christopher Wood argues, premodern Germans tended not to distinguish between older buildings and their newer replacements, or between ancient icons and more recent forgeries.
             But Wood shows that over the course of the fifteenth and early sixteenth centuries, emerging replication technologies—such as woodcut, copper engraving, and movable type—altered the relationship between artifacts and time.  Mechanization highlighted the artifice, materials, and individual authorship necessary to create an object, calling into question the replica’s ability to represent a history that was not its own. Meanwhile, print catalyzed the new discipline of archaeological scholarship, which began to draw sharp distinctions between true and false claims about the past. Ultimately, as forged replicas lost their value as historical evidence, they found a new identity as the intentionally fictional image-making we have come to understand as art.
Expand Description

READERS
Browse our collection.

PUBLISHERS
See BiblioVault's publisher services.

STUDENT SERVICES
Files for college accessibility offices.


SEARCH

ADVANCED SEARCH

BROWSE

by TOPIC
  • by BISAC SUBJECT
  • by LOC SUBJECT
by TITLE
by AUTHOR
by PUBLISHER
WANDER
RANDOM TOPIC
ABOUT BIBLIOVAULT
EBOOK FULFILLMENT
CONTACT US

More to explore...
Recently published by academic presses

                   


home | accessibility | search | about | contact us

BiblioVault ® 2001 - 2023
The University of Chicago Press

BiblioVault A SCHOLARLY BOOK REPOSITORY
Results
  • PUBLISHER LOGIN
  • ADVANCED SEARCH
  • BROWSE BY TOPIC
  • BROWSE BY TITLE
  • BROWSE BY AUTHOR
  • BROWSE BY PUBLISHER
  • ABOUT BIBLIOVAULT
  • EBOOK FULFILLMENT
  • CONTACT US
3 books about Wood, Christopher S.
Albrecht Altdorfer and the Origins of Landscape
Christopher S. Wood
University of Chicago Press, 1993
In the early sixteenth century, Albrecht Altdorfer promoted landscape from its traditional role as background to its new place as the focal point of a picture. His paintings, drawings, and etchings appeared almost without warning and mysteriously disappeared from view just as suddenly. In Albrecht Altdorfer and the Origins of Landscape,Christopher S. Wood shows how Altdorfer transformed what had been the mere setting for sacred and historical figures into a principal venue for stylish draftsmanship and idiosyncratic painterly effects. At the same time, his landscapes offered a densely textured interpretation of that quintessentially German locus—the forest interior.
 
This revised and expanded second edition contains a new introduction, revised bibliography, and fifteen additional illustrations.
 
“Excellent illustrations . . . [and] detailed exuberant comments leave the reader in no doubt about Altdorfer’s brilliance and originality.”—Anthony Grafton, New York Review of Books
 
“A study that is bound to become a standard work.”—Independent on Sunday
 
“Sumptuous.”—Daily Telegraph
[more]

Albrecht Altdorfer and the Origins of Landscape
Revised and Expanded Second Edition
Christopher S. Wood
Reaktion Books, 2014
In the early sixteenth century, Albrecht Altdorfer promoted landscape from its traditional role as background to its new place as the focal point of a picture. His paintings, drawings, and etchings appeared almost without warning and mysteriously disappeared from view just as suddenly. In Albrecht Altdorfer and the Origins of Landscape, Christopher S. Wood shows how Altdorfer transformed what had been the mere setting for sacred and historical figures into a principal venue for stylish draftsmanship and idiosyncratic painterly effects. At the same time, his landscapes offered a densely textured interpretation of that quintessentially German locus—the forest interior.
 
This revised and expanded second edition contains a new introduction, revised bibliography, and fifteen additional illustrations.
[more]

Forgery, Replica, Fiction
Temporalities of German Renaissance Art
Christopher S. Wood
University of Chicago Press, 2008
Today we often identify artifacts with the period when they were made. In more traditional cultures, however, such objects as pictures, effigies, and buildings were valued not as much for their chronological age as for their perceived links to the remote origins of religions, nations, monasteries, and families. As a result, Christopher Wood argues, premodern Germans tended not to distinguish between older buildings and their newer replacements, or between ancient icons and more recent forgeries.
             But Wood shows that over the course of the fifteenth and early sixteenth centuries, emerging replication technologies—such as woodcut, copper engraving, and movable type—altered the relationship between artifacts and time.  Mechanization highlighted the artifice, materials, and individual authorship necessary to create an object, calling into question the replica’s ability to represent a history that was not its own. Meanwhile, print catalyzed the new discipline of archaeological scholarship, which began to draw sharp distinctions between true and false claims about the past. Ultimately, as forged replicas lost their value as historical evidence, they found a new identity as the intentionally fictional image-making we have come to understand as art.
[more]




home | accessibility | search | about | contact us

BiblioVault ® 2001 - 2023
The University of Chicago Press