可视化的空虚:西线的风景和澳大利亚和英国的儿童绘本

Q1 Arts and Humanities
Martin Kerby, M. Baguley
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引用次数: 2

摘要

尽管第一次世界大战对参战国家提出了极其复杂的要求,但战场景观仍然主导着当代对这场冲突的看法。澳大利亚和英国的儿童图画书作者和插画家也采取了类似的关注点,特别是在西线方面。然而,插画家的任务更复杂,因为他们继承了一个自1914年以来一直挑战艺术家的美学问题。就像当时英国、澳大利亚、加拿大和新西兰的官方战争艺术家一样,他们每时每刻都面临着描绘超现实空虚景观的挑战。与其说它是战前艺术家们所理解的风景,不如说它是一种反风景,仿佛战争已经消灭了自然。剩下的是一片反乌托邦的荒野,见证了工业化战争的破坏力。本文将探讨一些澳大利亚和英国的儿童绘本插画家如何回应战场景观的空虚,或者正如贝卡·威尔(Becca Weir)所描述的那样,可衡量的虚无的悖论。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Visualising emptiness: the landscape of the Western Front and Australian and English children’s picture books
ABSTRACT Although the Great War made extraordinarily complex demands on the nations involved, it is the landscape of the battlefield which has continued to dominate contemporary perceptions of the conflict. Australian and English children’s picture book authors and illustrators have adopted a similar focus, particularly regarding the Western Front. It is the illustrators, however, who have the more complex task, for they have inherited an aesthetic issue that has challenged artists since 1914. Like the British, Australian, Canadian, and New Zealand official war artists of the time, they are confronted, at every turn, by the challenge of depicting a surreally empty landscape. It was not so much a landscape as the artists understood it before the war, but rather an anti-landscape, as though the war had annihilated Nature. What was left was a dystopian wilderness that bore witness to the destructive power of industrialised warfare. This article will explore how a selection of Australian and English children’s picture book illustrators respond to the emptiness of the battlefield landscape, or as Becca Weir so evocatively characterises it, the paradox of measurable nothingness.
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来源期刊
Landscape History
Landscape History Arts and Humanities-History
CiteScore
0.80
自引率
0.00%
发文量
23
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