Cart
Free US shipping over $10
Proud to be B-Corp

Consuming Views Donna-Belle Garvin

Consuming Views By Donna-Belle Garvin

Consuming Views by Donna-Belle Garvin


$7.50
Condition - Good
Only 1 left

Summary

A lavish new look at a key nineteenth-century tourist region and the art it inspired

Faster Shipping

Get this product faster from our US warehouse

Consuming Views Summary

Consuming Views: Art and Tourism in the White Mountains, 1850-1900 by Donna-Belle Garvin

The White Mountains, solid and ageless peaks of granite, rise up across the landscape of northern New Hampshire. Their natural beauty has inspired visitors to the state for centuries. Generations of visitors to the mountains have found something new and meaningful for themselves and for the culture in which they live. By the middle of the nineteenth century the region's magnificent and varied scenery attracted tourists and artists from around the country as well as from Europe. More than four hundred artists are known to have painted White Mountain scenes before 1900. Artists who visited New Hampshire during the second half of the nineteenth century interpreted White Mountain scenery in ways designed to appeal to and attract tourists and to serve as souvenirs of their mountain visits. Hotel owners encouraged painters to work and to take up residence in the White Mountain hotels. Paintings enriched the tourists' sensibilities and enhanced an appreciation of the landscape, even as a growing middle class was gaining cultural as well as economic power. Merchants, bankers, and attorneys, along with their families, embraced gentility by acquiring, displaying, and contemplating paintings. For some these paintings remained mere symbols of their own rising economic status. For others these objects and images were of more spiritual than economic value. Each painting included in this book presents a compelling and unique perspective of a White Mountain locale. All thirty-seven paintings featured are reproduced in full color. The artworks are organized geographically, following routes nineteenth century travelers took while touring the White Mountains. The reader will be able to explore the key sites that attracted tourists and inspired artists, beginning and ending with a visit to North Conway, home of the earliest White Mountain artists' community. Thirty-three authors from many different disciplines have contributed to this publication. Approaching the subject from a variety of perspectives, they reveal the story and significance of White Mountain scenery, of the nineteenth-century artists who depicted it, and of the people (consumers) who acquired, owned, and cherished White Mountain art.

Consuming Views Reviews

"In the past several decades, scholars of the White Mountains have brought wide attention to the fertile interaction of art and history in the mountain region of New Hampshire. The elegantly designed and carefully researched publication, Consuming Views: Art and Tourism in the White Mountains, 1850-1900, is a worthy contribution to this growing body of knowledge. Many of this publication's thirty-three authors have already made significant contributions to the literature; their essays are a welcome furthering of this rewarding subject."--Historical New Hampshire
"You don't need to be specifically interested in the White Mountains to see how this book contributes to our understanding of the phenomena of tourism in the 19th century, the way artists and their clients have responded to the natural world, and the place of landscape in the construction of identity."--Arlis

About Donna-Belle Garvin

Donna-Belle Garvin is the editor of New Hampshire Historical Society's journal Historical New Hampshire

Additional information

CIN1584656131G
9781584656135
1584656131
Consuming Views: Art and Tourism in the White Mountains, 1850-1900 by Donna-Belle Garvin
Used - Good
Hardback
University Press of New England
2006-11-30
112
N/A
Book picture is for illustrative purposes only, actual binding, cover or edition may vary.
This is a used book - there is no escaping the fact it has been read by someone else and it will show signs of wear and previous use. Overall we expect it to be in good condition, but if you are not entirely satisfied please get in touch with us

Customer Reviews - Consuming Views