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Enlightened Animals in Eighteenth-Century Art

Sarah R. Cohen

Sensation, Matter, and Knowledge

Barcode 9781350203624
Paperback

Original price £28.39 - Original price £28.39
Original price
£28.39
£28.39 - £28.39
Current price £28.39

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Release Date: 20/04/2023

Genre: Arts & Photography
Label: Bloomsbury Visual Arts
Series: Material Culture of Art and Design
Language: English
Publisher: Bloomsbury Publishing PLC

Sensation, Matter, and Knowledge

How do our senses help us to understand the world? This question, which preoccupied Enlightenment thinkers in Western Europe, also emerged as a key theme in depictions of animals in eighteenth-century art. This book examines the ways in which painters, sculptors, porcelain modelers, and other decorative designers portrayed animals as sensing subjects who physically confirmed the value of material experience. The independent agency of animals with their own right to free existence, a topic of growing urgency in our own era, emerges in striking and often surprising ways within this early nexus of artistic experimentation.

The sensual style known today as the Rococo encouraged the proliferation of animals as exemplars of empirical inquiry in the eighteenth century, ranging from the popular subject of the monkey artist to the alchemical wonders of the life-sized porcelain animals created for the Saxon court. Examining writings on sensory knowledge by La Mettre, Condillac, Diderot and other philosophers side by side with depictions of the animal in art, Cohen argues that artists promoted the animal as a sensory, thinking subject while also validating the material basis of their own professional practice.