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Breaking frame : technology and the visual arts in the nineteenth century / Julie Wosk.

Catalogue Information
Field name Details
ISBN 081351925X
Author Wosk, Julie (author)
Title Breaking frame : technology and the visual arts in the nineteenth century / Julie Wosk.
Spine title Breaking frame
Publisher and/or associated date/s New Brunswick, N.J. : Rutgers University Press, [1992]
©1992
Description xiii, 267 pages : illustrations ; 24 cm.
Bibliography Includes bibliographical references (pages [223]-249) and index.
Contents 1. The Traumas of Transport in Nineteenth-Century Art -- 2. Art, Technology, and the Human Image -- 3. Technology and the Design Debate -- 4. The Anxiety of Imitation: Electrometallurgy and the Imitative Arts -- 5. The Struggle for Legitimacy: Cast Iron -- 6. Classicizing the Machine: Ornamented Steam Engine Frames and the Search for an Industrial Style -- Afterword: Into the Twentieth Century.
Summary In this incisive, abundantly illustrated study, Julie Wosk explores for the first time how the visual arts reflected the explosive psychological impact of the Industrial Revolution on English and American society. Wosk reveals the ways artists and designers responded to the hopes and fears for the first industrial age, and how their work continues to illuminate our own visions of technology and culture. Wosk also reveals the striking ability of artists to capture the drama and the dangers of the new technologies, seen in their images of factories spewing smoke, steam boilers bursting, trains crashing, and satiric views of people-turned-automatons. Their art dramatically mirrored widespread feelings of disorientation - the phenomenon sociologists have called "breaking frame." Wosk demonstrates the startling impact of new technologies on the decorative arts and industrial design. Working with manufacturers, artists added ornamentation to machinery and helped fulfill the middle-class demand for factory-made copies of decorative objects, even as art critics debated the aesthetic and social consequences of these imitative versions of original works of art. She also highlights how artists' responses to a world newly transformed by technology prefigure the fear and pride, resistance and accommodation to technological achievement that are still felt over a century later.
Subjects Art and technology
Art and technology -- History
Call number 2024.089
Catalogue Information 100086242 Beginning of record . Catalogue Information 100086242 Top of page .
Item Information
Barcode Shelf Location Collection Volume Ref. Status Due Date
A00971987 2024.089
General Collection   . Available to Museum Staff .  
. Catalogue Record 100086242 ItemInfo Beginning of record . Catalogue Record 100086242 ItemInfo Top of page .