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OverviewFull Product DetailsAuthor: Elizabeth A. PergamPublisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd Imprint: Routledge Weight: 0.730kg ISBN: 9781138272828ISBN 10: 1138272825 Pages: 396 Publication Date: 08 March 2017 Audience: General/trade , College/higher education , General , Tertiary & Higher Education Format: Paperback Publisher's Status: Active Availability: In Print ![]() This item will be ordered in for you from one of our suppliers. Upon receipt, we will promptly dispatch it out to you. For in store availability, please contact us. Table of Contents"Contents: Introduction: the first blockbuster; Art and commerce in Manchester at mid-century; ""What to see and where to see it""; Guiding and recording: from pamphlets to photography; Practicing art history; Profiting through art; Appendices; Select bibliography; Index."Reviews'...a notable achievement, both as a vindication of the exhibition's importance and as a work of reference.' Burlington Magazine '...this book offers a very good account of the planning, layout, and organization of the exhibition, and art historians working on particular Old Masters might find some useful reception history... [it] will be a useful guide for future researchers...' American Historical Review 'Elizabeth A. Pergam's masterly study of the Manchester Art Treasures Exhibition makes two important and distinct scholarly contributions. First, the book carries out a meticulous historical analysis of a landmark exhibition. Second, it claims to expose the origins of some assumptions embedded in today's art history. This volume offers a much needed in-depth account of the Exhibition, but its major intervention is its assessment of the event's legacies; this in turn leads to broader conclusions about the impact of the exhibitions on the discipline of art history... This is a fine book, and its contribution to these two fields - the history of exhibitions and the history of collecting - is undoubtable... The Manchester Art Treasures Exhibition of 1857 is essential reading for anyone studying the history of exhibitions, the history of the arts in Manchester, the history of collecting in the United States, of the history of Victorian cultural enterprise.' Victorian Studies 'Pergam's study fits in well with current trends in nineteenth-century British art scholarship, particularly its attempts to establish an alternative to the dominant Francophilic narrative by re-inserting the Art Treasures Exhibition into a history of exhibitions, which often starts with the Salon des Refuses in 1863. The focus on Manchester adds a welcome strand to the field of Victorian art history, which tends to overemphasize the importance of London... The findings of her meticulous primary research, contained within the text and the extensive appendices, will be '...a notable achievement, both as a vindication of the exhibition's importance and as a work of reference.' Burlington Magazine '...this book offers a very good account of the planning, layout, and organization of the exhibition, and art historians working on particular Old Masters might find some useful reception history... [it] will be a useful guide for future researchers...' American Historical Review 'Elizabeth A. Pergam's masterly study of the Manchester Art Treasures Exhibition makes two important and distinct scholarly contributions. First, the book carries out a meticulous historical analysis of a landmark exhibition. Second, it claims to expose the origins of some assumptions embedded in today's art history. This volume offers a much needed in-depth account of the Exhibition, but its major intervention is its assessment of the event's legacies; this in turn leads to broader conclusions about the impact of the exhibitions on the discipline of art history... This is a fine book, and its contribution to these two fields - the history of exhibitions and the history of collecting - is undoubtable... The Manchester Art Treasures Exhibition of 1857 is essential reading for anyone studying the history of exhibitions, the history of the arts in Manchester, the history of collecting in the United States, of the history of Victorian cultural enterprise.' Victorian Studies 'Pergam's study fits in well with current trends in nineteenth-century British art scholarship, particularly its attempts to establish an alternative to the dominant Francophilic narrative by re-inserting the Art Treasures Exhibition into a history of exhibitions, which often starts with the Salon des Refusés in 1863. The focus on Manchester adds a welcome strand to the field of Victorian art history, which tends to overemphasize the importance of London... The findings of her meticulous primary research, contained within the text and the extensive appendices, will be valuable to anyone studying changes in taste and the development of art-historical discourse in mid-nineteenth-century Britain.' Art History '...a notable achievement, both as a vindication of the exhibition's importance and as a work of reference.' Burlington Magazine '...this book offers a very good account of the planning, layout, and organization of the exhibition, and art historians working on particular Old Masters might find some useful reception history... [it] will be a useful guide for future researchers...' American Historical Review 'Elizabeth A. Pergam's masterly study of the Manchester Art Treasures Exhibition makes two important and distinct scholarly contributions. First, the book carries out a meticulous historical analysis of a landmark exhibition. Second, it claims to expose the origins of some assumptions embedded in today's art history. This volume offers a much needed in-depth account of the Exhibition, but its major intervention is its assessment of the event's legacies; this in turn leads to broader conclusions about the impact of the exhibitions on the discipline of art history... This is a fine book, and its contribution to these two fields - the history of exhibitions and the history of collecting - is undoubtable... The Manchester Art Treasures Exhibition of 1857 is essential reading for anyone studying the history of exhibitions, the history of the arts in Manchester, the history of collecting in the United States, of the history of Victorian cultural enterprise.' Victorian Studies 'Pergam's study fits in well with current trends in nineteenth-century British art scholarship, particularly its attempts to establish an alternative to the dominant Francophilic narrative by re-inserting the Art Treasures Exhibition into a history of exhibitions, which often starts with the Salon des Refuses in 1863. The focus on Manchester adds a welcome strand to the field of Victorian art history, which tends to overemphasize the importance of London... The findings of her meticulous primary research, contained within the text and the extensive appendices, will be valuable to anyone studying changes in taste and the development of art-historical discourse in mid-nineteenth-century Britain.' Art History '...a notable achievement, both as a vindication of the exhibition's importance and as a work of reference.' Burlington Magazine '...this book offers a very good account of the planning, layout, and organization of the exhibition, and art historians working on particular Old Masters might find some useful reception history... [it] will be a useful guide for future researchers...' American Historical Review 'Elizabeth A. Pergam's masterly study of the Manchester Art Treasures Exhibition makes two important and distinct scholarly contributions. First, the book carries out a meticulous historical analysis of a landmark exhibition. Second, it claims to expose the origins of some assumptions embedded in today's art history. This volume offers a much needed in-depth account of the Exhibition, but its major intervention is its assessment of the event's legacies; this in turn leads to broader conclusions about the impact of the exhibitions on the discipline of art history... This is a fine book, and its contribution to these two fields - the history of exhibitions and the history of collecting - is undoubtable... The Manchester Art Treasures Exhibition of 1857 is essential reading for anyone studying the history of exhibitions, the history of the arts in Manchester, the history of collecting in the United States, of the history of Victorian cultural enterprise.' Victorian Studies 'Pergam's study fits in well with current trends in nineteenth-century British art scholarship, particularly its attempts to establish an alternative to the dominant Francophilic narrative by re-inserting the Art Treasures Exhibition into a history of exhibitions, which often starts with the Salon des Refuses in 1863. The focus on Manchester adds a welcome strand to the field of Victorian art history, which tends to overemphasize the importance of London... The findings of her meticulous primary research, contained within the text and the extensive appendices, will be valuable to anyone studying changes in taste and the development of art-historical discourse in mid-nineteenth-century Britain.' Art History Author InformationElizabeth A. Pergam received her PhD from the Institute of Fine Arts, NYU. Her current research project focuses on American collecting of Old Master and British paintings. She was the Curator of the Dian Woodner Collection from 2006-2012 and is now on the Faculty of the Master's programs in Art Business and American Fine and Decorative Art at the Sotheby's Institute of Art, New York. Tab Content 6Author Website:Countries AvailableAll regions |