Rifts in the fabric of the British Empire produced spectacular and sometimes strange effects in eighteenth-century British art. The 鈥渞evolution of history painting鈥 described by Edgar Wind as long ago as 1938, in which contemporary events and topical detail came to be portrayed in the grand manner traditionally reserved for ancient heroes, was a dramatic manifestation of new attitudes towards the temporality of images among artists working in Britain in the 1770s, when the problem of how to engage with the present took centre stage. But revaluations of genre were matched by experiments with new media that were not limited to the domain of painting. Printmaking, officially a secondary and inferior activity, proved a particularly vibrant arena for artists in this critical moment.听
This lecture explores printmaking鈥檚 distinctive purchase by examining the work of the Irish artist James Barry (1741-1806), whose prints grapple with a set of key questions:听how to represent the present in relation to the past and the future; whether to see history as progressive and forward-moving, or to envisage the possibility of rupture in which time might loop back or leap ahead to produce something entirely new. Above all was the question of where to position oneself as a historical agent听in听time, which is a central concern of Barry鈥檚 most explicitly pro-revolutionary print,听The Phoenix,听etched in 1776. Yet the politics of Barry鈥檚 printmaking, this lecture will suggest, inhered not simply in his prints鈥 overt content but in their particular materiality and, in the case of his so-called 鈥渞eproductive鈥 prints, in the relationships they established with their painted referents.听
Dr Esther Chadwick is Lecturer in Art History at The 麻豆视频, where she is teaches an MA degree in circum-Atlantic visual culture of the long eighteenth century. Before joining The 麻豆视频 she was a curator in the Department of Prints and Drawings at the British Museum. She received her doctorate in Art History at Yale University in 2016. She has curated exhibitions on portraiture and transatlantic slavery and on the Haitian Revolution. This lecture is drawn from her current book project, The Radical Print: Art and Politics in Late Eighteenth-Century Britain.
Organised by Professor David Peters Corbett (The 麻豆视频)听
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