Landscape

Erika Langmuir

£9.99

Landscape is probably the most popular type of painting, but anyone who has ever been disappointed by vacation photographs knows how difficult it is to turn a view into a picture. This work shows how artists in past centuries translated outdoor space and light into paint, and how landscape imagery evolved from mere ornament into a visual metaphor of the human condition.

Out of stock

Publish Date: 02/02/2018

Description

Landscape is probably the most popular type of painting, but anyone who has ever been disappointed by vacation photographs knows how difficult it is to turn a view into a picture. This book shows how artists in past centuries translated outdoor space and light into paint, and how landscape imagery evolved from mere ornament into a visual metaphor of the human condition. The story is told from its beginnings in Roman mural decoration, through the Renaissance transformation of landscape into a vehicle for feelings and ideas, to the Impressionist revolution and beyond. The continuing relevance of art to how we see the world, and our place in it, is demonstrated through a practical discussion of optics of real and painted landscape, illustrated with works from the National Gallery, London.

Additional information

Weight 214 g
Dimensions 8.25 × 5.75 × 8 mm
Author

Publisher

Imprint

Cover

Paperback

Pages

96

Language

English

Edition

Redesigned edition

Dewey

758.109 (edition:23)

Readership

General – Trade / Code: K