From Library Journal
The 25-year-old French painter Theodore Gericault was already a gold medal winner at the 1812 Paris Salon and would soon acquire fame for his 1819 "Raft of the Medusa" when he traveled to Italy in 1816 to experience ancient and Renaissance art. The drawings and paintings from that year-long sojourn are significant because they represent a pivotal point in a major artist's tragically short life?he died at age 32 of a tubercular spinal infection. This scholarly book analyzes individual examples of Gericault's developing Romantic style by examining thematic and technical influences from the classical and neoclassical past, his contemporary world, and sculpture as well as painting. Art historian Whitney began researching Gericault for a doctoral thesis at the Courtauld Institute. Since he focuses on just one year in Gericault's life, nonspecialists desiring a broader perspective should also have access to Lorenz Eitner's Gericault: His Life and Work (Orbis, 1983). Recommended for academic libraries.?Anne Marie Lane, American Heritage Ctr., Laramie, Wy.
Copyright 1997 Reed Business Information, Inc.
Book Description
Whitney provides the most detailed account to date of the biographical circumstances of G_ricault`s stay in Italy, paying particular attention to the artistic milieu in which the artist found himself in Rome. This beautiful book studies the work produced by Gricault during this year and assesses the importance of the trip for the rest of his career.