With few exceptions, sculpturewhether statues, busts, or monumentshas not figured prominently in discussions of visual imagery and the public sphere in eighteenth-century Britain. This volume explores what is lost by this omission and how a more comprehensive examination of sculpture might extend analyses of British art. An in-depth look at the making and viewing of eighteenth-century marble sculpture, Figured in Marble effectively writes sculpture back into the narrative of British art.
The opening chapter situates the study of English sculpture within a broader context of art history. Three essays explore the ways in which the histories of sculpture in England have been written and articulated through museum displays. Several case studies illustrate issues about making sculpture, categories of sculpture, the setting and viewing of sculpture, and collecting and displaying it. Together, these chapters consider sculpture that ranges from Wilton's monument to General Wolfe and Nollekens' Judgement of Paris group to the French bronzes owned by Rysbrack and William Shenstone's figure of Pan.
Malcolm Baker is deputy head of research at the Victoria and Albert Museum. Among his many writings is Roubiliac and the Eighteenth-Century Monument: Sculpture as Theater, which he coauthored. It was awarded the 1996 Mitchell Prize for the History of Art and the 1996 Book Prize of the American Historians of British Art. As a 2000-2001 scholar at the Getty Research Institute, Baker is working on a book about the eighteenth-century portrait bust and notions of selfhood.
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