阿特拉斯的艺术家:他们在创造移民-殖民地澳大利亚视觉文化中的作用

IF 0.4 3区 历史学 Q3 AREA STUDIES
Gary Werskey, Natalie Wilson
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引用次数: 2

摘要

长期以来,关于澳大利亚艺术的讨论一直集中在墨尔本主要印象派画家的标志性作品上。然而,在19世纪下半叶,占据澳大利亚视觉文化主导地位的是殖民者殖民时期的澳大利亚插图报纸上的木刻图片,尤其是在悉尼。1885年至1900年间,由于《澳大利亚风景如画的地图集》的出现,悉尼的艺术插画家的影响力达到了新的高度。这本配有大量插图的出版物被广泛誉为“南十字星下艺术的诞生”。《地图集》的艺术家们不仅成功地巩固了澳大利亚历史、成就和前景的移民-殖民形象,而且还通过他们后来为《悉尼邮报》、《伦敦图报》和《公报》所做的工作传播了这一形象。在朱利安·阿什顿(Julian Ashton)的带领下,他们将悉尼变成了澳大利亚移民艺术的中心,并在19世纪90年代将汤姆·罗伯茨(Tom Roberts)和亚瑟·斯特里顿(Arthur street)拉入了他们的轨道。在插图媒体放弃木刻版画之后,这些艺术家继续通过其他媒体影响澳大利亚的视觉文化,直到第一次世界大战。重温悉尼插画的黄金时代,为大多数澳大利亚人看到的艺术提供了一个新的窗口。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
The Artists of the Atlas: Their Role in Creating Settler-Colonial Australia’s Visual Culture
ABSTRACT Discussions of Australian art in the run-up to Federation have long focused on the iconic works of Melbourne’s leading impressionist painters. However, it was the wood-engraved pictures of settler-colonial Australia’s illustrated press, especially in Sydney, that dominated its visual culture in the second half of the 19th century. Between 1885 and 1900, the influence of Sydney’s artist-illustrators reached new heights, thanks to the appearance of the Picturesque Atlas of Australasia. This extravagantly illustrated publication was widely hailed as marking “the birth of art beneath the Southern Cross”. The artists of the Atlas succeeded not only in consolidating a settler-colonial iconography of Australia’s history, achievements and prospects but also in disseminating it through their later work for the Sydney Mail, the London Graphic and the Bulletin. Led by Julian Ashton, they transformed Sydney into the epicentre of Australian settler art, drawing Tom Roberts and Arthur Streeton into their orbit by the 1890s. Following the illustrated press’s abandonment of wood engraving, these artists continued to influence Australia’s visual culture via other media up to and including the First World War. Revisiting Sydney’s golden age of illustration offers a new window onto the art most Australians saw.
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来源期刊
CiteScore
0.90
自引率
20.00%
发文量
56
期刊介绍: The Journal of Australian Studies (JAS) is the journal of the International Australian Studies Association (InASA). In print since the mid-1970s, in the last few decades JAS has been involved in some of the most important discussion about the past, present and future of Australia. The Journal of Australian Studies is a fully refereed, international quarterly journal which publishes scholarly articles and reviews on Australian culture, society, politics, history and literature. The editorial practice is to promote and include multi- and interdisciplinary work.
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