Spanish Baroque Art

1941 ◽  
Vol 1 (1) ◽  
pp. 17
Author(s):  
Bernard C. Heyl ◽  
Werner Weisbach
Keyword(s):  
Author(s):  
Kate Armond

When Sacheverell Sitwell’s Southern Baroque Art was published in 1924 the term ‘baroque’ was still considered a pejorative in Britain, Italy and much of southern Europe, denoting vulgar extravagance and a lack of formal restraint. Sacheverell’s original account of a largely forgotten incarnation of the Italian and Spanish baroque changed this perception of the period dramatically for the well-read British public. His text was at once a critically-acclaimed source for the art-historian and a lyrical, imaginative recreation of the artistic and architectural splendours of Lecce, Noto and Naples and other destinations that Sacheverell and his brother visited in Italy and Spain. I explore the literary techniques and historical sources that led to the book’s particular success, and compare this account of the baroque with the very different approach taken in his later, more factual German Baroque Art. This chapter summarises the ways in which Sacheverell Sitwell’s recreation of the baroque period through the arts, and in particular the Commedia dell’Arte, helped to shape the playful and exclusive Sitwell aesthetic during the 1920s.


1941 ◽  
Vol 18 (71) ◽  
pp. 139-145
Author(s):  
Pedro Penzol
Keyword(s):  

1941 ◽  
Vol 18 (71) ◽  
pp. 139
Author(s):  
Pedro Penzol
Keyword(s):  

Author(s):  
James Tweedie

Like the tableau vivant, the cinematic still life experienced a stunning revival and reinvention in the late twentieth century. In contrast to the stereotypically postmodern overload of images, the still life in film initiates a moment of repose and contemplation within a medium more often defined by the forward rush of moving pictures. It also involves a profound meditation on the relationship between images and objects consistent with practices as diverse as the Spanish baroque still life and the Surrealist variation on the genre. With the work of Terence Davies and Alain Cavalier’s Thérèse (1986) as its primary touchstones, this chapter situates this renewed interest in the cinematic still life within the context of both the late twentieth-century cinema of painters and a socially oriented art cinema that focuses on marginal people and overlooked objects rather than the hegemonic historical narratives also undergoing a revival at the time.


Author(s):  
Michael Moriarty

Although the concept “baroque” is less obviously applicable to philosophy than to the visual arts and music, early modern philosophy can be shown to have connections with baroque culture. Baroque style and rhetoric are employed or denounced in philosophical controversies, to license or discredit a certain style of philosophizing. Philosophers engage with themes current in baroque literature (the mad world, the world as a stage, the quest for the self) and occasionally transform these into philosophical problems, especially of an epistemological kind (are the senses reliable? how far is our access to reality limited by our perspective?) Finally, the philosophies of Malebranche and Berkeley, with their radical challenges to so-called common sense, and their explanation of conventional understandings of the world as based on illusion, have something of the disturbing quality of baroque art and architecture.


Hispania ◽  
1997 ◽  
Vol 80 (1) ◽  
pp. 59
Author(s):  
David H. Darst ◽  
Matthew D. Stroud
Keyword(s):  

2011 ◽  
Vol 15 (1-2) ◽  
pp. 172-171 ◽  
Author(s):  
Chene Heady Faulstick

AbstractThis essay reconsiders Charles Ryder’s religious conversion in Brideshead Revisited in terms of a primarily emotional conversion. When reading the novel as a pilgrimage to passion, readers can see in Charles a legitimate, convincing emotional conversion, which should—when emphasizing traditional Catholic ideals—ultimately also be understood as a religious conversion. Charles’s emotional interaction with Catholicism includes his intimate, formative relationship with the Catholic Flyte family, especially Sebastian, and aspects of his career as a Baroque artist, as Baroque art is often identified with Catholicism. It also includes Charles’s disenchantment with both the soullessness of war, which drains its participants of any emotional experience, and the modern world, which lacks connection to depth and tradition. Finally, the emotive power of his inadvertent pilgrimage to Brideshead also connects Charles to Catholicism as the house facilitates Charles’s memories of his religious experience at Lord Marchmain’s deathbed, his artistic conversion to Baroque art, and his passionate friendship with Sebastian. Such a broad definition of Catholicism calls for an expansive understanding of religion, but it is this kind of a religious understanding that Brideshead Revisited recommends.


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