LIST OF FIGURES vii ACKNOWLEDGMENT xi PREFACE: The Apparent Permanence of the Museum as Against Its Actual Permanence: The Nineteenth-Century Culture of Art xv INTRODUCTION: The Museum as Mortuary 3 PART ONE: ART IN THE MUSEUM: ARTIST AND FRAGMENT AT THE TURN OF THE NINETEENTH CENTURY 15 CHAPTER ONE: David and Fuseli: The Artist in the Museum, the Museum in tHe Work of Art 17 David: The Oaths 18 Fuseli: Before Ruins 28 CHAPTER TWO: "Monuments of Pure Antiquity": The Challenge of the Object in Neoclassical Theory and Pedagogy 40 The Statue and the Penis 47 The Penis and the Statue 64 CHAPTER THREE: "United, Completer Knowledge": Barry, Blake, and the Search for the Artist 73 Alternative Origins 73 Yoseph of Arimathea: Blake and the Work of Art 76 The Laocoun: Stupendous Originals 80 PART TWO: THE AUTHOR AS WORK OF ART: ACCUMULATION, DISPLAY, AND DEATH IN LITERARY BIOGRAPHY 91 CHAPTER FOUR: Hazlitt, Scott, Lockhart: Intimacy, Anonymity, and Excess 93 "That Which is Unseen ": The Life of Genius 93 Talking in a Tempest: Hazlitt on Contemporary Life 102 A Writing Hand: The Life of Scott 113 CHAPTER FIVE: Keats: In the Library, in the Museum 130 The Museum: Accommodating Art. 133 "A Perfect Treasure House": The Museum of the Mind 150 PART THREE: ABSENCE AND EXCESS: THE PRESENCE OF THE OBJECT 165 CHAPTER SIX: Outline, Collection, City: Hazlitt, Ruskin, and the Encounter with Art 167 "Asking for the Old Pictures": Hazlitt's Dream of the Louvre 168 Ruskin in the Presence of Art: Art, Treasure, Exhihition 180 Learned Outlines: Hazlitt and Ruskin on Flaxman 189 CHAPTER SEVEN: Vast Knowledge/Narrow Space: The Stones of Venice 197 Travel and Organization 197 The Natures of Gothic 209 PART FOUR: THE DEATHS OF THE CRITICS 225 CHAPTER EIGHT: Modernity as Resurrection in Pater and Wilde 227 Filling in the Outline, or "What Is Really New" 227 "A Pomegranate Cut with a Knife of Ivory" 251 AFTERWORD: Las Meninas as Cover: Foucault, Velazquez, and the Reflection of the Museum 263 NOTES 279 ILLUSTRATION CREDITS 337 INDEX 339
Desire and Excess is one of the most exciting and sophisticated books I have read for some time. It is capaciously learned, sensitively researched, and wonderfully graceful and witty. By reconsidering the institutions and aesthetics responsible for the culture of the museum in modernity, it offers a new history of art-historical discourse. -- Isobel Armstrong, Birkbeck College, London Desire and Excess tells about the time a dazzling company of poets got lost inside the Louvre, and only got out once they had together created the giant figure of the Artist. Jonah Siegel's brilliance is continually breathtaking, so it's lucky that he has placed such solid ground beneath our feet by his luxurious, intricately wrought scholarship. -- Elaine Scarry, author of "On Beauty and Being Just" A timely book on the relationship of art and experience to the hallowed sanctuaries of museum collections. Jonah Siegel is right on target in dealing with this hugely important issue. I can only admire the vast range of themes and the quiet display of learning so apparent in this text. The book kept me constantly alert and informed. -- Robert Rosenblum, New York University This ambitious and fascinating work traces the relations between the development of the museum, the history of taste, and the figure of the artist/author in nineteenth-century England. Here Jonah Siegel reads the long collapse of neoclassicism as a productive crisis in the modern conception of originality. His argument is remarkably rich, subtle, learned, and provocative. -- Ian Duncan, University of Oregon Desire and Excess marks the emergence of a powerful and distinctive critical sensibility, remarkable both for its range of erudition and for the extraordinary quality of reflection brought to bear on the works explored here. Jonah Siegel mingles exacting close analysis and broad, confident historical and cultural reference in a manner that is almost unfailingly persuasive. The book will appeal to readers interested in the intellectual, artistic, literary, and cultural histories of Britain from the eighteenth through twentieth centuries, as well as to those engaged in postmodern critical reflection on art institutions and artistic agency. -- James Eli Adams, Indiana University
Jonah Siegel has taught at Columbia and Harvard Universities. He is Assistant Professor of English at Rutgers University.
"Desire and Excess is rich in ... luminous insights, [and is] beautifully expressed... The strength of [Siegal's book] lies in how vividly [it] evoke[s] a visual life for nineteenth-century Britons that makes us feel as if we see what they saw."--Gillen D'Arcy Wood, The Wordsworth Circle "This is an extensive and ambitious study... Siegel's book is the product of many years of thought and research... [T]he central argument is compelling. The artists and critics of the nineteenth century are not, as they are sometimes thought to be, of one mind about the nature and role of art, and of the museums that house collections of art. The questions that worried them are complex and testing, and they are still unresolved."--Dinah Birch, Times Literary Supplement "[A] subtly argued, richly textured, and gracefully written study of the interwoven histories of the figure of the artist and museum culture in the nineteenth-century Britain."--Hilary Fraser, Nineteenth-Century Literature
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