Victorian Science and Imagery: Representation and Knowledge in Nineteenth Century Visual Culture

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The nineteenth century was a period of science and imagery: when scientific theories and discoveries challenged longstanding boundaries between animal, plant, and human, and when art and visual culture produced new notions about the place of the human in the natural world. Just as scientists relied on graphic representation to conceptualize their ideas, artists moved seamlessly between scientific debate and creative expression to support or contradict popular scientific theories—such as Darwin’s theory of evolution and sexual selection—deliberately drawing on concepts in ways that allowed them to refute popular claims or disrupt conventional knowledges.

Focusing on the close kinship between the arts and sciences during the Victorian period, the art historians contributing to this volume reveal the unique ways in which nineteenth-century British and American visual culture participated in making science, and in which science informed art at a crucial moment in the history of the development of the modern world. Together, they explore topics in geology, meteorology, medicine, anatomy, evolution, and zoology, as well as a range of media from photography to oil painting. They remind us that science and art are not tightly compartmentalized, separate influences. Rather, these are fields that share forms, manifest as waves, layers, lines, or geometries; that invest in the idea of the evolution of form; and that generate surprisingly kindred responses, such as pain, pleasure, empathy, and sympathy.

Author(s): Nancy Rose Marshall
Series: Sci & Culture in the Nineteenth Century
Publisher: University of Pittsburgh Press
Year: 2021

Language: English
Pages: 373
City: Pittsburgh

Contents
Acknowledgments
Introduction. Victorian Science and Imagery | Nancy Rose Marshall
Chapter 1. Measuring Native America: Early American Archaeology and the Politics of Time | Rachael Z. DeLue
Chapter 2. “All That Is Solid Melts into Air”: Burne-Jones, Glaciation, and the Matter of History | Alison Syme
Chapter 3. Grasping the Elusive: Victorian Weather Forecasting and Arthur Hughes’s Illustrations for George Macdonald’s At the Back of the North Wind | Carey Gibbons
Color Gallery
Chapter 4. A Haunting Picture, in Light of Victorian Science: John Everett Millais’s Speak! Speak! | Nancy Rose Marshall
Chapter 5. Photographing Ether, Documenting Pain: Representing the Chemical Invisible in the Daguerreotypes of Southworth & Hawes | Naomi Slipp
Chapter 6. Drawing Racial Comparisons in Nineteenth-Century British and American Anatomical Atlases | Keren Rosa Hammerschlag
Chapter 7. The Post-Darwinian Eye, Physiological Aesthetics, and the Early Years of Aestheticism, 1860–1876 | Barbara Larson
Chapter 8. Darwinian Aesthetics and Aestheticism in James McNeill Whistler’s Peacock Room | Caitlin Silberman
Notes
Bibliography
List of Contributors
Index