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OverviewFull Product DetailsAuthor: Phillipe JunodPublisher: Reaktion Books Imprint: Reaktion Books ISBN: 9781780238111ISBN 10: 1780238118 Pages: 224 Publication Date: 13 November 2017 Audience: College/higher education , Postgraduate, Research & Scholarly Format: Hardback Publisher's Status: Active Availability: Available To Order ![]() We have confirmation that this item is in stock with the supplier. It will be ordered in for you and dispatched immediately. Table of ContentsReviewsAn astonishing number of books have been written to propose or define various practical and theoretical harmonies of music and art. This is not another one of those books. This work expertly synthesizes the key issues, debates, and voices in the connections (or, just as importantly, disconnects) between music and the visual arts that have been ongoing for hundreds of years. Counterpoints accomplishes this by drawing on a remarkable array of primary and secondary sources from Pythagoras. . . . Junod's cyclopedic knowledge and scholarly acumen, clever, playful style, and passion for music combine to make this a rare scholarly work that deserves readership beyond academia. The illustrations, ranging from the fifteenth to the twentieth centuries, illuminate the discussion and will intrigue the reader. This book is a polymath's Kircherian exploration. Highly recommended for libraries supporting art, music, and architecture. --Thomas W. Bell, librarian and associate professor, Kansas State University ARLIS/NA Reviews """'This is a comprehensive, historical introduction to the relationship between music and art. Junod examines that idea of an original unity between the arts, their battle for supremacy, and the complex interweaving of parallels, analogies, and synaesthesia (could colors be used like notes in a scale?). . . . This is a valuable and eloquent reference work, taking us to the dissolution of categories we find today.""-- ""BBC Music Magazine"" ""For decades colleagues and I have been enlightened and delighted by the insights of Junod, art historian extraordinaire with an expert passion for music (gleaned in part from study with Nadia Boulanger). At last English-speaking readers can enjoy his sympathy and depth of understanding, always conveyed with refreshing turns of phrase that lose nothing in this excellent translation. Reading Junod, I always sense anew, and with enjoyment, the rich fabric of our artistic history.""--Roy Howat, concert pianist, editor, author, research fellow at the Royal Academy of Music, London, and Royal Conservatoire of Scotland, Glasgow ""From opera to the symphonic poem, to paintings inspired by music, many attempts have been made to pair sounds with pictures and to combine the arts of time and space. Counterpoints explores this artistic evolution from ancient times to the present day. . . . The anteriority and originality of Junod's work as well as his immense erudition is a great chance for English-speaking colleagues to have access to his 'unique cultural history that provides a critical understanding of a popular but unheralded art form.'""-- ""Music in Art"" ""An astonishing number of books have been written to propose or define various practical and theoretical harmonies of music and art. This is not another one of those books. This work expertly synthesizes the key issues, debates, and voices in the connections (or, just as importantly, disconnects) between music and the visual arts that have been ongoing for hundreds of years. Counterpoints accomplishes this by drawing on a remarkable array of primary and secondary sources from Pythagoras. . . . Junod's cyclopedic knowledge and scholarly acumen, clever, playful style, and passion for music combine to make this a rare scholarly work that deserves readership beyond academia. The illustrations, ranging from the fifteenth to the twentieth centuries, illuminate the discussion and will intrigue the reader. This book is a polymath's Kircherian exploration. Highly recommended for libraries supporting art, music, and architecture.""--Thomas W. Bell, librarian and associate professor, Kansas State University ""ARLIS/NA Reviews""" From opera to the symphonic poem, to paintings inspired by music, many attempts have been made to pair sounds with pictures and to combine the arts of time and space. Counterpoints explores this artistic evolution from ancient times to the present day. . . . The anteriority and originality of Junod's work as well as his immense erudition is a great chance for English-speaking colleagues to have access to his 'unique cultural history that provides a critical understanding of a popular but unheralded art form.' --Thomas W. Bell, librarian and associate professor, Kansas State University Music in Art An astonishing number of books have been written to propose or define various practical and theoretical harmonies of music and art. This is not another one of those books. This work expertly synthesizes the key issues, debates, and voices in the connections (or, just as importantly, disconnects) between music and the visual arts that have been ongoing for hundreds of years. Counterpoints accomplishes this by drawing on a remarkable array of primary and secondary sources from Pythagoras. . . . Junod's cyclopedic knowledge and scholarly acumen, clever, playful style, and passion for music combine to make this a rare scholarly work that deserves readership beyond academia. The illustrations, ranging from the fifteenth to the twentieth centuries, illuminate the discussion and will intrigue the reader. This book is a polymath's Kircherian exploration. Highly recommended for libraries supporting art, music, and architecture. --Thomas W. Bell, librarian and associate professor, Kansas State University ARLIS/NA Reviews An astonishing number of books have been written to propose or define various practical and theoretical harmonies of music and art. This is not another one of those books. This work expertly synthesizes the key issues, debates, and voices in the connections (or, just as importantly, disconnects) between music and the visual arts that have been ongoing for hundreds of years. Counterpoints accomplishes this by drawing on a remarkable array of primary and secondary sources from Pythagoras. . . . Junod's cyclopedic knowledge and scholarly acumen, clever, playful style, and passion for music combine to make this a rare scholarly work that deserves readership beyond academia. The illustrations, ranging from the fifteenth to the twentieth centuries, illuminate the discussion and will intrigue the reader. This book is a polymath's Kircherian exploration. Highly recommended for libraries supporting art, music, and architecture. --Thomas W. Bell, librarian and associate professor, Kansas State University ARLIS/NA Reviews From opera to the symphonic poem, to paintings inspired by music, many attempts have been made to pair sounds with pictures and to combine the arts of time and space. Counterpoints explores this artistic evolution from ancient times to the present day. . . . The anteriority and originality of Junod's work as well as his immense erudition is a great chance for English-speaking colleagues to have access to his 'unique cultural history that provides a critical understanding of a popular but unheralded art form.' --Music in Art From opera to the symphonic poem, to paintings inspired by music, many attempts have been made to pair sounds with pictures and to combine the arts of time and space. Counterpoints explores this artistic evolution from ancient times to the present day. . . . The anteriority and originality of Junod's work as well as his immense erudition is a great chance for English-speaking colleagues to have access to his 'unique cultural history that provides a critical understanding of a popular but unheralded art form.' --Music in Art An astonishing number of books have been written to propose or define various practical and theoretical harmonies of music and art. This is not another one of those books. This work expertly synthesizes the key issues, debates, and voices in the connections (or, just as importantly, disconnects) between music and the visual arts that have been ongoing for hundreds of years. Counterpoints accomplishes this by drawing on a remarkable array of primary and secondary sources from Pythagoras. . . . Junod's cyclopedic knowledge and scholarly acumen, clever, playful style, and passion for music combine to make this a rare scholarly work that deserves readership beyond academia. The illustrations, ranging from the fifteenth to the twentieth centuries, illuminate the discussion and will intrigue the reader. This book is a polymath's Kircherian exploration. Highly recommended for libraries supporting art, music, and architecture. --Thomas W. Bell, librarian and associate professor, Kansas State University ARLIS/NA Reviews Author InformationPhilippe Junod was Professor of History of Art at the University of Lausanne from 1971 to 2003. He is the author of numerous works on art theory. Tab Content 6Author Website:Countries AvailableAll regions |