Neoklasicistní dekorativní umění ve střední Evropě v éře Marie Terezie a Josefa II: transkulturalita, nebo kulturní reprodukce?
- Title:
- Neoklasicistní dekorativní umění ve střední Evropě v éře Marie Terezie a Josefa II: transkulturalita, nebo kulturní reprodukce?
Neoclassical decorative arts in Central Europe during the era of Maria Theresa and Joseph II: transculturality or cultural reproduction? - Creator:
- Suchánek, Pavel and Valeš, Tomáš
- Identifier:
- https://cdk.lib.cas.cz/client/handle/uuid:aee6509d-91fe-484d-8906-fac398aee524
uuid:aee6509d-91fe-484d-8906-fac398aee524
issn:1804-6983
doi:10.51305/cor.2018.01.05 - Subject:
- Winterhalder, Josef, 1743-1807, Schweigl, Andreas, dekorativní umění, design, neoklasicismus (umění), neoclassicism (art), decorative arts, Morava (Česko), Vídeň (Rakousko), Moravia (Czechia), Vienna (Austria), umělecká akademie, art academy, 8, and 94(437)
- Type:
- model:article and TEXT
- Format:
- print, bez média, and svazek
- Description:
- This paper considers forms of cultural transfer in decorative design in Central Europe in the second half of the 18th century, focussing on works that combine aspects of both free creative art and artisan craftsmanship. Based on a detailed analysis of a number of works (or parts thereof), the authors show that trends in decoration that had hitherto been broadly interpreted as a somewhat uninventive adoption of fashionable French graphic pattern-books and picture albums in the "goût grec" style (Jean-François de Neufforge, Jean-Charles Delafosse et al.) in fact represented an innovative quest for an original modern synthesis taking its inspiration from classical Roman art (Giovanni Battista Piranesi, Giocondo Albertolli, Carlo Antonini) and developing ideas emerging from the recently introduced teaching of artistic design at the Vienna Academy and from circles close to the imperial court (Johann Baptist Hagenauer, Ignaz Josef Würth et al.). The whole phenomenon in considered within the wider context of official cultural policy at the time of Maria Teresa’s and Joseph II’s economic and administrative reforms and is interpreted as one of a number of processes and strategies which, for various reasons, led to a reduction in transcultural transfer. Decorative design in Central Europe in the latter half of the 18th century thus paid more than lip-service to the ideal of universal culture in the sense of transculturality, interpreting it in a specifically local, middle-European and to some extent "nationalized" way - and, from a historical perspective, with extraordinary success., Pavel Suchánek a Tomáš Valeš., and Obsahuje bibliografické odkazy
- Language:
- Czech and English
- Rights:
- http://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/mark/1.0/
policy:public - Coverage:
- 95-110
- Source:
- Cornova: revue České společnosti pro výzkum 18. století | 2018 Volume:8 | Number:1
- Harvested from:
- CDK
- Metadata only:
- false
The item or associated files might be "in copyright"; review the provided rights metadata:
- http://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/mark/1.0/
- policy:public