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Noble Dreams, Wicked Pleasures Holly Edwards

Noble Dreams, Wicked Pleasures By Holly Edwards

Noble Dreams, Wicked Pleasures by Holly Edwards


$19.49
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Summary

Explores complex American attitudes toward the Near East - as revealed in collected paintings, interior design, and multiple vernacular forms - at the formative moment of industrialization and the crystallization of a truly mass culture.

Noble Dreams, Wicked Pleasures Summary

Noble Dreams, Wicked Pleasures: Orientalism in America, 1870-1930 by Holly Edwards

Noble Dreams, Wicked Pleasures explores complex American attitudes toward the Near East - as revealed in collected paintings, interior design, and multiple vernacular forms - at the formative moment of industrialization and the crystallization of a truly mass culture. Published to coincide with the multimedia exhibition that opens at the Sterling and Francine Clark Art Institute and travels to the Walters Art Gallery and the Mint Museum of Art, this catalogue considers how urban, mercantile, Protestant America represented the Islamic world of the Middle East and North Africa in ways that say more about itself than the foreign culture.This gorgeously illustrated volume first looks at the use of Orientalist stereotypes by some of the country's most important high art painters of the nineteenth century: Frederic Edwin Church's treatment of the exotic terrain through a lens of deep religiosity; a more cosmopolitan reading of the harem girl by John Singer Sargent; the perfumed alternative to industrial capitalism conjured in the landscapes and market scenes of Samuel Colman and Louis Comfort Tiffany; and interpretations of the Orient as emancipatory by Ella Pell, the only major woman Orientalist. The book next traces the popularization of Orientalism in the decorative arts (including a few treasures from Olana, Church's Moorish-style home on the Hudson), on Broadway, and in Hollywood, as well as through advertising that linked consumer products with visual suggestions of exotic sexuality and through cultural objects, such as the Shriners' fez. The generous color plates show both an innocent romanticization of the Orient and a darker, heavily eroticized version of Oriental otherness. An excellent chronology and bibliography, in addition to expert essays by both Americanists and Islamicists, give context to absorbing images.Though a perfect companion for visitors to the exhibition, Noble Dreams, Wicked Pleasures is also for anyone seeking an uncommon take on the development of American self-understanding.

Noble Dreams, Wicked Pleasures Reviews

Although published alongside a traveling exhibition, this fascinating and very readable work is what a museum book ought to be: a well-illustrated, stand-alone study. Edwards has compiled a full examination of this branch of American exoticism and how it permeated the culture from high to low...An exotic, art-historical jewel.--Library Journal An intellectually stimulating, much-needed catalogue for an important exhibition of American material culture.--CAA.reviews A valuable tool for American historians interested in material culture.--The Historian Edwards has drawn together a superb cohort of American and Islamic art historians to describe the curious mix of high and low cultural interests... One great contribution of this [book] is that it situates Orientalism within diverse visual cultures, including architecture, advertising, design, book illustration, dance, and film.--Michael Davidson, Modernism/Modernity

About Holly Edwards

Holly Edwards is an independent scholar and specialist on Islamic art. She is the author of The Genesis of Islamic Architecture. Contributors to the catalogue include Brian Allen, Assistant Director for Curatorial Programs at the Clark Art Institute; Steve Caton, Professor of Social Anthropology at Harvard University; Zeynep Celik, Professor in the School of Architecture at the New Jersey Institute of Technology; and Oleg Grabar, Professor Emeritus at the School of Historical Studies of the Institute for Advanced Studies, Princeton.

Table of Contents

LENDERS TO THE EXHIBITION vi DIRECTOR'S FOREWORD vii CURATOR'S PREFACE viii ACKNOWLEDGMENTS xi Roots and Others OLEG GRABAR 3 A Million and One Nights: Orientalism in America, 1870-1930 HOLLY EDWARDS 11 The garments of instruction from the wardrobe of pleasure: American Orientalist Painting in the 1870s and 1880s BRIAN T. ALLEN 59 Speaking Back to Orientalist Discourse at the World's Columbian Exposition ZEYNEP CELIK 77 The Sheik: Instabilities of Race and Gender in Transatlantic Popular Culture of the Early 1920s STEVEN C. CATON 99 Catalogue of the Exhibition HOLLY EDWARDS 120 WORKS CITED 233 INDEX 239

Additional information

GOR005316392
9780691050041
069105004X
Noble Dreams, Wicked Pleasures: Orientalism in America, 1870-1930 by Holly Edwards
Used - Very Good
Paperback
Princeton University Press
20000716
224
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 very good condition, but if you are not entirely satisfied please get in touch with us

Customer Reviews - Noble Dreams, Wicked Pleasures