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Pacific Arcadia (coinciding with an exhibition at Stanford University's Iris and B. Gerald Cantor Center for Visual Art) amply demonstrates how images of California initially expressed the imperatives of its colonists. Spanish (and later Mexican) engravers, cartographers, and painters celebrated the potential for wealth and the benefits of "civilizing" the native inhabitants, while foreign visitors betrayed their own imperial designs by emphasizing Franciscan brutalities and Californio thriftlessness. To Anglo-Americans, swarming into the region in the 1840s, "California came to represent cultural values at odds with the ideals of hard work, community solidarity, and religious observance on which the nation was founded." In order to combat the resulting Tocquevillean excesses of Gold Rush culture, California's boosters founded an era of European-style genre painting, mission-revival architecture, orange-crate art , and scenic photography, which represented the state's environment and Spanish history in conformity with late-19th-century values of socially edifying consumption.
Perry's research is encyclopedically detailed. While she fully discusses prominent painters, such as Alfred Bierstadt and ranchero pictorialist Charles Christian Nahl, she also pays heed to the role that more mechanical art forms, such as political cartooning and stereoscopic photography, played in reinventing the Golden State's image. Vividly written and bounteously illustrated, Pacific Arcadia provides a long-needed discussion of the links between California's arts movements and the rising hegemony of America's middle class near the turn of the 20th century. --John M. Anderson --This text refers to an out of print or unavailable edition of this title.
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Most Helpful Customer Reviews
16 of 18 people found the following review helpful:
1.0 out of 5 stars
Revisionist History Illustrated,
By
This review is from: Pacific Arcadia: Images of California, 1600-1915 (Hardcover)
Someday, when the historians and sociologists of the future try to dissect the late 20th Century, they will make snide comments and rude remarks about the rampant "political correctness" and revisionist history that infected so much of the 1990s -- and they will use the text of this book as "Exhibit A." It entirely misses the essence of what actually happened here during three hundred fascinating years."Pacific Arcadia : Images of California, 1600-1915" ought to be a wonderful book; the history of California is full of fizz and sizzle, a place where spectacular things happened and superb artists were present to record them. The images in this book are indeed wonderful -- but they are accompanied with a commentary that commits a historian's cardinal sin, applying the manners and morals of the present to a time and place in the past. The author simply can't accept that the artists who recorded their views of California back in the 18th and 19th centuries actually liked the things she abhors today. Here's just one small example: " . . . The repeated instances of animals under restraint - tethered horses in the field, rearing horses dominated by Spanish riders, cattle corralled by the presidio walls - serve as metaphors for the involuntary servitude of the native laborers and refer to the often unwilling role of Indians in the 'encomienda' system. Furthermore, the pointed wedge [in one painting] of the garrison walls that cuts so imposingly into the fields where the Indians work also hints at the frequently hostile relationship between the settlers and indigenous tribes. ..." Well, if you like that kind of stuff, there's plenty more of the same. It is really rather tragic, too, because the book includes some really delicious painting, drawing, photography, and engravings that deserve better. The illustrations are generally subordinate to the text; reproductions are often a bit too small to see clearly, and captions provide only minimal information. The author of this book has obviously spent a great deal of time studying the people of California's past; it is unfortunate that she didn't seem to learn much about them.
0 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
An outstanding book,
By
This review is from: Pacific Arcadia: Images of California, 1600-1915 (Hardcover)
It is rare that one comes across an art historian who is broad enough in their perspective to be accessible to a general audience. Ms. Perry knows her history and is able to place art in a fascinating historical context. As one other reviewer has well stated, anyone interested in the history of California and the United States would be well advised to read this book. The choice and quality of the reproductions are outstanding. Bravo to the author and Stanford University!
0 of 9 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
Great Book,
By A Customer
This review is from: Pacific Arcadia: Images of California, 1600-1915 (Paperback)
For anyone who is interested in the history of California and art, this is a very interesting book.
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