‘A series of surfaces’: The New Sculpture and Cinema
Author(s) -
Rebecca Sheehan
Publication year - 2016
Publication title -
19 interdisciplinary studies in the long nineteenth century
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
ISSN - 1755-1560
DOI - 10.16995/ntn.732
Subject(s) - sculpture , movie theater , exhibition , temporality , art , visual arts , context (archaeology) , reflexivity , everyday life , art history , sociology , history , archaeology , social science , philosophy , epistemology
This article examines New Sculpture in the context of the emergence of cinema, arguing that chronophotography had a major impact on the temporalization of sculpture in late nineteenth-century Britain. Departing from the demonstrable impact of motion studies on Rodin’s sculpture, the article compares Sir Frederic Leighton’s Athlete Wrestling with a Python (1877) to Rodin’s work on the basis of the works’ shared temporality and self-reflexivity. The article charts the influence of cinema’s prototypes on the democratization of sculpture in the Victorian period, the contingencies of the viewer’s temporal encounter with the work extending to sculpture’s ‘everyday’ context of exhibition and its ‘everyday’ subjects.
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