ArtistBookstore.com

 Location:  Home » Architecture Books » Landscape and Western Art (Oxford History of Art)  
Categories
Architecture Books
Art History Books
Art and Craft Books
Artists (A-Z)
Artists, Architects & Photographers
Calligraphy Books
Color Books
Colored Pencil Books
Graphic Design Books
Illustration Books
Photography Books
Digital Photography Books
Art Instruction Books
Art Marketing Books
Fine Art Supplies
Art Magazines
Photography Magazines
Oil Painting Books
Landscape Painting Books
Still Life Painting Books
Watercolor Painting Books
Subcategories
Paperback
Mass Market
Trade
Related Categories
• Textbook Buyback
Specialty Stores
Books
• Landscape
Painting
Arts & Photography
Subjects
Books
• Still Life
Painting
Arts & Photography
Subjects
Books
• Paperback
Binding (binding)
Refinements
Books
• Printed Books
Format (feature_browse-bin)
Refinements
Books
• Amazon.com: Non-Seasonal Buyback
Special Features Stores
Self Service
Books
• Linguistics
Humanities
New & Used Textbooks
Specialty Boutique
Books
• Art History
Humanities
New & Used Textbooks
Specialty Boutique
Books

Landscape and Western Art (Oxford History of Art)

Landscape and Western Art (Oxford History of Art)Author: Malcolm Andrews
Publisher: Oxford University Press, USA
Category: Book

List Price: $27.95
Buy Used: $7.99
as of 9/8/2010 10:49 MDT details
You Save: $19.96 (71%)



New (21) Used (24) from $7.99

Seller: BWB - Textbooks
Rating: 5.0 out of 5 stars 2 reviews
Sales Rank: 114100

Media: Paperback
Pages: 256
Number Of Items: 1
Shipping Weight (lbs): 1.3
Dimensions (in): 9.3 x 6.5 x 0.6

ISBN: 0192842331
Dewey Decimal Number: 758.1091821
EAN: 9780192842336
ASIN: 0192842331

Publication Date: February 3, 2000
Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days

Tell A Friend

Also Available In:

  • Hardcover - Landscape and Western Art (Oxford History of Art Series)

Similar Items:


Editorial Reviews:

Product Description
What is landscape? How does it differ from "land"? Does landscape always imply something to be pictured, a scene? When and why did we begin to cherish images of nature? What is "nature"? Is it everything that isn't art, or artifact? By addressing these and many other questions, Landscape and Western Art explores the myriad ideas and images of the natural world in Western art since the Renaissance.

Implying that land is the raw material, and that art is created by turning land into landscape, which then becomes art, author Malcolm Andrews takes the reader on a thematic tour of the fascinating and challenging issues of landscape as art. The books broad sweep covers the full, rich spectrum of landscape art, including painting, gardening, panorama, poetry, photography, and art. Artistic issues are investigated in connection with Western cultural movements, and within a full international and historical context.

Clear explanations and beautiful illustrations convey to the reader the idea of landscape as an experience in which everyone is creatively involved. It is an enlightening and comprehensive critical overview of landscape art.


Customer Reviews:
5 out of 5 stars Excellent Smart Study   August 27, 2007
Doug - Haydn Fan (California)
12 out of 12 found this review helpful

This book faces two usually insurmountable hurdles - first, designing an art book in a smallish size, with the corresponding destruction of anything like a scale appreciation for larger images true size; and second, covering an enormous amount of material in a very short text.
The first remains an indefensible decision, and there's no more to be said. As for the second hurdle, Andrews does a fine job of what baseball pitchers refer to when they wiggle out of endless bases loaded situations without giving up a run - walking between the raindrops. This scholarly act of prestidigatation calls for hearty applause - usually such surveys are either too careful or too general. Happily this book is neither, but rather thought-provoking and sagacious.

Andrews success seems to lie in an acquired acceptance that for all the modern kitchen sink tools applied to art history - from Levi-Straussian anthropology to historical statistical anaylysis to Foucault's deconstructionist revisionism, there remains an abiding need for aesthetic appreciation. As one reads through the book, a sort of moderated mediatation or commentary on what is landscape, how we see it, a large array of such new thinking pops up, many contemporary responses about the nature of landscape are offered. Yet in the end Andrews falls back, and rather slyly I might add, on a sort of updated aestheticism. The distinction, and the difference Andrews makes with this old tool is surprising. The material comes across with a clarity and directedness absent from the more typical contemporary approaches to art, approaches emphasizing far more than the works of art, usually at the expense of shrinking down their full import in a maze of dubious cross-referencing.

Andrews greatest gift is confidence - he conveys a supreme sureness whatever he is writing about. In an age of relative values Andrews' certainty reverberates with an insolent disdain for doubt. (I am reminded of one critic's snickering potshot at A.L. Rowse's offhand dismissal of alternate Shakepeare author theories as pure nonsense - "for Rowse, doubt is an undiscovered country.") But Andrews, for all of that, is very much the modern, quite up on the various formalized readings and professional jargon. He has taken the measure of each of these chimeras and gone back to draw his own conclusions around an aesthetic largely free of post-modern cant. For Andrews the modern critical methodologies are but tools, used when needed, and not self-indulgence repudiating the reader in deliberately obtuse and hermetic language. And a huge bonus - Andrews is fun to read, displaying an extraordinarily adept mind; his questions and examples rarely failing to not only make his point, but develop it.

Having showered the author with praise I must point out one caveat: unlike Kenneth Clarke, who invariably seemed to put his figure on the one painting defining an age or movement, Andrews sometimes misses the obvious. A discussion of Niagara which is posed to rightly culminate in Church's great masterpiece suddenly veers off into a discussion of the Panorama, interesting enough as idea, but invariably second rate art. In deliberately thumbing an intellectual nose at Church, Andrews reveals some blind spots - he fails to understand what connects Church's greatest work with the early Wright's prairie architecture - land-gripping yet enclosed and interlocking horizontals celebrating the continent's scale. I find it strange indeed that such a book could fail to register Wright's influence and importance on our view of landscape. Next to these responses to the New World Andrew's Panoramas appear quite naked, generalized and simplistic. Although they fit nicely into his argument, he misses the chance to look beyond and over the edge, as it were. This blatant Eurocentric reading of American art continues on in a discussion of imperialist viewpoints and uninteresting observations on the over-rated Bierstadt: for Andrews the historical connections of American painting outweigh the purely artistic. The result? Even a century and half later Europeans refuse to take seriously our greatest landscape artist Church because he doesn't fit their critical template.
Despite these peccadilloes this remains a first rate book, and a must for any Art History collection.



5 out of 5 stars Thought provoking   December 27, 2009
James (Indianapolis, IN United States)
2 out of 2 found this review helpful

This book is an thought provoking continuation of the 1962 discussion on "landscape art" that art historian Kenneth Clark introduced in his pioneering work "Landscape into Art".
This is NOT an easy read nor "the history of landscape" as the title suggests but rather a discussion of key themes in landscape art such as landscape as cultural construct, political catalyst, topography, and practices of "framing the view" appropriate for those educated in art history. The many wonderful but small reproductions serve to illustrate the concepts presented throughout the text.


CERTAIN CONTENT THAT APPEARS ON THIS SITE COMES FROM AMAZON SERVICES LLC. THIS CONTENT IS PROVIDED ‘AS IS’ AND IS SUBJECT TO CHANGE OR REMOVAL AT ANY TIME.
powered by NetVida MarketingDallas SEO Services