Every Man His Own Art Critic

Every Man His Own Art Critic

by Patrick Geddes

8 chapters3h 29mEnglish1887

About this book

This collection includes two texts written to accompany two blockbuster art exhibitions: Every man his own art critic at the Manchester Exhibition,1887 and Every man his own art critic (Glasgow Exhibition,1888). The Manchester Royal Jubilee Exhibition was held in a purpose-built exhibition centre at Old Trafford to commemorate the Golden Jubilee of Queen Victoria's accession to the throne. The exhibition was open for 166 days and attracted 4.5 million paying visitors. In the following year, Glasgow hosted the International Exhibition of Science, Art and Industry from May to Novemeber, which attracted 5.7 million visitors. Although these exhibitions were designed to showcase the industrial prowess of their respective cities, substantial exhibitions of fine art made the case that they were also cities of culture. Patrick Geddes's accompanying texts were designed as introductions to the visual arts that would help visitors appreciate what they saw. The Manchester text introduces Geddes's view that painting could be best appreciated through a threefold understanding of what the artist saw, how they represented what they saw and the feeling that they aimed to express. Rather than simply repeating these views in the Glasgow text, Geddes used the opportunity to expand upon them in the context of a new exhibition. - Summary by Phil Benson

Chapters (8)

1Every Man His Own Art Critic at the Manchester Exhibition, 1887: Introduction - The Aspects of Art
814
2Chapter 1: The Art of Seeing
1514
3Chapter 2: The Seeing of Art
1897
4Chapter 3: The Feeling of Art
1655
5Every Man His Own Art Critic (Glasgow Exhibition, 1888): Introduction - The Aspects of Art
1139
6Chapter 1: The Art of Seeing
517
7Chapter 2: The Seeing of Art
2295
8Chapter 3: The Feeling of Art
2738

Comments

Sign in to leave a comment