The Coral Mind: Adrian Stokes's Engagement with Architecture, Art History, Criticism, and Psychoanalysis

Author:   Stephen Bann
Publisher:   Pennsylvania State University Press
Volume:   7
ISBN:  

9780271029702


Pages:   240
Publication Date:   15 November 2007
Format:   Paperback
Availability:   Out of stock   Availability explained
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The Coral Mind: Adrian Stokes's Engagement with Architecture, Art History, Criticism, and Psychoanalysis


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Full Product Details

Author:   Stephen Bann
Publisher:   Pennsylvania State University Press
Imprint:   Pennsylvania State University Press
Volume:   7
Dimensions:   Width: 24.10cm , Height: 1.60cm , Length: 25.40cm
Weight:   0.880kg
ISBN:  

9780271029702


ISBN 10:   0271029706
Pages:   240
Publication Date:   15 November 2007
Audience:   College/higher education ,  Undergraduate ,  Postgraduate, Research & Scholarly
Format:   Paperback
Publisher's Status:   Active
Availability:   Out of stock   Availability explained
The supplier is temporarily out of stock of this item. It will be ordered for you on backorder and shipped when it becomes available.

Table of Contents

Contents List of Illustrations Bibliographical Note Introduction Stephen Bann 1. Stokes and the Architectural Basis of the Sculptural Alex Potts 2. A Deep and Necessary Commerce : Venice and the Architecture of Colour-Form Stephen Kite 3. The House of the Mind : On Piero, Perspective, and Psychoanalysis Peter Leech 4. We Are Exalted : Adrian Stokes's Coming to Terms with Michelangelo's Massiveness David Hulks 5. Stokes's Analysis Richard Read 6. Portrait of an Analyst: Adrian Stokes and Melanie Klein Lyndsey Stonebridge 7. Healing Art-Healing Stokes Janet Sayers 8. Showing Openly the Inside of Action : Place, Ballet, Psychoanalysis Martin Golding 9. The Art Historian as Art Critic: In Praise of Adrian Stokes David Carrier 10. Inferential Muscle and the Work of Criticism: Michael Baxandall on Adrian Stokes and Art-Critical Language Paul Tucker 11. To Bring the Distant Things Near: Distance in Relation to the Work of Art in Stokes's Thought Etienne Jollet 12. Stones of Solace Michael Ann Holly Index

Reviews

Readers who enjoy questioning their own intellectual processes in encounters with created forms will appreciate the mind revealed in these essays. --W.S. Bradley, Choice


Guided by honest questions about why and how one reads Stokes today, the essay authors approach the reflections put forth by Stokes from differing perspectives that reveal the complexity of his observations. Stokes's methods of inquiry do not consistently follow the prevailing theoretical approaches of twentieth-century art historical scholarship of iconography, social history, or psychoanalysis, but they converge with all these methodologies in his uniquely subjective response to the space, place, and surface of the art object. Readers who enjoy questioning their own intellectual processes in encounters with created forms will appreciate the mind revealed in these essays. --W. S. Bradley, Choice Readers who enjoy questioning their own intellectual processes in encounters with created forms will appreciate the mind revealed in these essays. --W.S. Bradley, Choice To the outside world, scholarly activity must often seem exceedingly tedious and of questionable purpose. To those who practice scholarly inquiry, even imperfectly, the prospect of a single mind grasping and engaging its subject with focused intellect can be thrilling. That fascination may explain the revived appreciation of Stokes's writings as records of his intellectual grappling with meaning in art, critical apprehension, and the creative psyche. The Coral Mind is the latest addition to this published appreciation, a collection of 12 intriguing essays on various aspects of Stokes's critical inquiry. Guided by honest questions about why and how one reads Stokes today, the essay authors approach the reflections put forth by Stokes from differing perspectives that reveal the complexity of his observations. Stokes's methods of inquiry do not consistently follow the prevailing theoretical approaches of 20th-century art historical scholarship of iconography, social history, or psychoanalysis, but they converge with all these methodologies in his uniquely subjective response to the space, place, and surface of the art object. Readers who enjoy questioning their own intellectual processes in encounters with created forms will appreciate the mind revealed in these essays. Summing Up: Recommended for graduate students and faculty/researchers. --W. S. Bradley, Choice


To the outside world, scholarly activity must often seem exceedingly tedious and of questionable purpose. To those who practice scholarly inquiry, even imperfectly, the prospect of a single mind grasping and engaging its subject with focused intellect can be thrilling. That fascination may explain the revived appreciation of Stokes's writings as records of his intellectual grappling with meaning in art, critical apprehension, and the creative psyche. The Coral Mind is the latest addition to this published appreciation, a collection of 12 intriguing essays on various aspects of Stokes's critical inquiry. Guided by honest questions about why and how one reads Stokes today, the essay authors approach the reflections put forth by Stokes from differing perspectives that reveal the complexity of his observations. Stokes's methods of inquiry do not consistently follow the prevailing theoretical approaches of 20th-century art historical scholarship of iconography, social history, or psychoanalysis, but they converge with all these methodologies in his uniquely subjective response to the space, place, and surface of the art object. Readers who enjoy questioning their own intellectual processes in encounters with created forms will appreciate the mind revealed in these essays. Summing Up: Recommended for graduate students and faculty/researchers. --W. S. Bradley, Choice


To the outside world, scholarly activity must often seem exceedingly tedious and of questionable purpose. To those who practice scholarly inquiry, even imperfectly, the prospect of a single mind grasping and engaging its subject with focused intellect can be thrilling. That fascination may explain the revived appreciation of Stokes s writings as records of his intellectual grappling with meaning in art, critical apprehension, and the creative psyche. The Coral Mind is the latest addition to this published appreciation, a collection of 12 intriguing essays on various aspects of Stokes s critical inquiry. Guided by honest questions about why and how one reads Stokes today, the essay authors approach the reflections put forth by Stokes from differing perspectives that reveal the complexity of his observations. Stokes s methods of inquiry do not consistently follow the prevailing theoretical approaches of 20th-century art historical scholarship of iconography, social history, or psychoanalysis, but they converge with all these methodologies in his uniquely subjective response to the space, place, and surface of the art object. Readers who enjoy questioning their own intellectual processes in encounters with created forms will appreciate the mind revealed in these essays. Summing Up: Recommended for graduate students and faculty/researchers. W. S. Bradley, Choice


Author Information

Stephen Bann is Professor of Art History at the University of Bristol and was President of the Comite International d'Histoire de l'Art from 2000 to 2004. His books include Ways Around Modernism (2007), Parallel Lines: Printmakers, Painters, and Photographers in 19th-Century France (2001), Paul Delaroche: History Painted (1997), and The True Vine: On Visual Representation and the Western Tradition (1989).

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