Victoria's lost pavilion : from nineteenth-century aesthetics to digital humanities
This book explores the significance of the now-lost pavilion built in the Buckingham Palace Gardens in the time of Queen Victoria for understanding experiments in British art and architecture at the outset of the Victorian era. It introduces the curious history of the garden pavilion, its experiment...
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Format: | Book |
Language: | English |
Published: |
Palgrave Macmillan
2020
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Subjects: | |
Online Access: | http://repository.vnu.edu.vn/handle/VNU_123/92275 |
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Institution: | Vietnam National University, Hanoi |
Language: | English |
Summary: | This book explores the significance of the now-lost pavilion built in the Buckingham Palace Gardens in the time of Queen Victoria for understanding experiments in British art and architecture at the outset of the Victorian era. It introduces the curious history of the garden pavilion, its experimental contents, the controversies of its critical reception, and how it has been digitally remediated. The chapters discuss how the pavilion, decorated with frescos and encaustics by some of the most prominent painters of the mid-nineteenth century, became the center of a national conversation about an identity for British art, the capacity of its artists, and the quality of Royal and public taste.Introduction: Experiments from Nineteenth-Century Aesthetics to Digital Humanities -- “The Little Hot-Bed of Fresco Painting”: Queen Victoria’s Garden Pavilion at Buckingham Palace -- Architectural Histories and Virtual Reconstructions: Queen Victoria’s Lost Pavilion in Digital Space -- The Contested Status of the Garden Pavilion: “Perfect ‘Bijou’” or Royal Blunder? -- The Garden Pavilion: A Portal to Victorian Taste -- Radiant Virtuality |
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