Full Description
For the first time, a set of distinguished American and British art historians consider the complex history of Anglo-American relations from the colonial period through to the 1960s
Features a transatlantic group of scholars considering the impact of this relationship on the history of art in both nations
Offers a set of new approaches, and much new material relating to the history of British and American art
Situates the history of British and American art in the context of recent scholarship, offering a new reading of this key artistic interaction
Contents
6 Notes on Contributors
8 Chapter 1 Anglo-American: Artistic Exchange between Britain and the USA
David Peters Corbett and Sarah Monks
30 Chapter 2 The Wolfe Man: Benjamin West's Anglo-American Accent
Sarah Monks
52 Chapter 3 Failure to Deliver: Watson and the Shark and the Boston Tea Party
Jennifer L. Roberts
74 Chapter 4 Picturesque Nostalgia as Ironic Dislocation: Joshua Shaw's Disruptive Visions of the Old New World
Kenneth Haltman
92 Chapter 5 Details of Absence: Frederic Church and the Landscape of Post-Emancipation Jamaica
Jennifer Raab
110 Chapter 6 Troubled Abstraction: Whiteness in Charles Dana Gibson and George Du Maurier
Jennifer A. Greenhill
132 Chapter 7 'In seen and unseen places': The Henry G. Marquand House and Collections in England and America
Melody Barnett Deusner
152 Chapter 8 Camden Town and Ashcan: Difference, Similarity and the 'Anglo-American' in the Work of Walter Sickert and John Sloan
David Peters Corbett
174 Chapter 9 Losing Sight: War, Authority, and Blindness in British and American Visual Cultures, 1914-22
David M. Lubin
196 Chapter 10 The Madness of Art: Georgia O'Keeffe and Virginia Woolf
Alexander Nemerov
216 Chapter 11 'Strange Encounters': Claes Oldenburg's 'Proposed Colossal Monuments' for New York and London
Jo Applin
236 Chapter 12 David Hockney: A Taste for Los Angeles
Cécile Whiting
253 Index