Rural Artists' Colonies in Europe, 1870-1910

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Rutgers University Press, 2001 - Всего страниц: 238

Why did thousands of nineteenth-century artists leave the established urban centers of culture to live and work in the countryside? By 1900, there were over eighty rural artists' communities across northern and central Europe. This is the first book to offer a critical analysis of this important phenomenon on a Europe-wide basis. Nina Lübbren combines close visual readings of little-known paintings with an innovative multidisciplinary approach, drawing on sociology, geography, and theories of tourism.

Rural artists' colonies have been unjustly neglected by an art history preoccupied with the urban avant-garde. Yet these communities hatched some of the most exciting innovations of late nineteenth-century painting. Moreover, the practices and images of rural artists articulated central concerns of urban middle-class audiences, in particular the yearning for a nostalgia-imbued life that was considered authentic, premodern, and immersed in nature. Paradoxically, it was precisely this perception that placed artists' colonies firmly within modernity, mainly through their contribution to an emergent mass tourism.

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Об авторе (2001)

Nina is currently working on a research project on German Expressionist sculptors, in particular Gela Forster, Milly Steger, Renée Sintenis and Emy Roeder. She is also interested in visual narrative in nineteenth-century European, mainly academic, history and genre painting. Her work here draws on reception theory and narrative theory.

Nina's past research has focused on landscape and peasant painting in the context of nineteenth-century rural artists' colonies, with an emphasis on geographical and tourism studies. She's also passionate about Bollywood cinema.

Nina completed her education (primary to PhD) in Jakarta (Indonesia), Sydney (Australia), Heidelberg and Berlin (Germany), Berkeley (California, USA) and Leeds (England). After graduation, she taught at Leeds, Birkbeck College and the Open University before joining Anglia Ruskin University.

Before taking up her present role as Deputy Head of the Department of English and Media and Principal Lecturer in Film Studies, she was Senior Lecturer in Art History and Modern Visual Culture in Cambridge School of Art.

Nina warmly welcome research students in the areas of 19th-century art, narrative, German art and Indian cinema.

Research interests
Expressionist sculpture, especially by women sculptors
Visual narrative in 19th-century painting
19th-century landscape
19th-century academic painting
Rural artists' colonies
Ottilie Reylaender
Gela Forster
Areas of research supervision
19th-century art
Bollywood cinema
German art, 1850-1950
Qualifications
PhD History of Art, University of Leeds
MA Art History and Italian, Freie Universität Berlin, Germany
Memberships, editorial boards
Member, Association of Art Historians (AAH)
Member, German Studies Association (GSA)
Member and Treasurer, Historical Fictions Research Network (HFRN)
Member, Association of Historians of Nineteenth-Century Art (AHNCA)
Member, International Society for the Study of Narrative (ISSN)
Fellow, Higher Education Academy (HEA)

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