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Rooms with a View: The Open Window in the 19th Century


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Item# 80-011657 

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DESCRIPTION

By Sabine Rewald

“Everything at a distance turns into poetry: distant mountains, distant people, distant events: all becomes Romantic.” With these words, the German poet Novalis anticipated the appeal of one of richest motifs in the visual arts: the open window. Beginning with two sepia drawings by Caspar David Friedrich, images of windows—with or without human figures, starkly bare or draped with billowing fabric—filled up artists’ sketchbooks and portfolios and resonated through the art academies and annual exhibitions of Germany, Denmark, France, Russia, and the other northern countries.

In contrast to examples from earlier centuries, such as the celebrated works of the Dutch painter Johannes Vermeer, the early nineteenth-century pictures usually show the windows straight on, with views seen through them—pastoral and alpine views, views of sea and sky or moon and clouds, and urban views of rooftops, steeples, shipyards, or the skyline of Rome, where so many northern artists went to complete their studies. Sabine Rewald’s informative and perceptive texts set these works in the context of their creators’ lives and careers, apartments and studios, families and professional circles. Following the motif from Friedrich’s sepia drawings in the early 1800s through the flowering of Romanticism to the midcentury emergence of Realism in the works of Adolph Menzel, Rewald provides a much-needed perspective on this important period in Europe even as the works themselves, gathered together here for the first time, offer pure visual pleasure.

204 pages, 115 illustrations (110 in full color). 8'' x 10''. Paper.

Named one of The Books of the Year by Times Literary Supplement (Books of the Year).

  • 204 pages
  • 115 illustrations (110 in full color)
  • 8'' x 10''
  • Paper

EDITORIAL REVIEWS

“Rewald is right on target.”
      —The New Republic

“Rewald always makes something resonant of all the images, in prose which has its own modest poetry.”
      —Times Literary Supplement (Books of the Year)



DESCRIPTION

By Sabine Rewald

“Everything at a distance turns into poetry: distant mountains, distant people, distant events: all becomes Romantic.” With these words, the German poet Novalis anticipated the appeal of one of richest motifs in the visual arts: the open window. Beginning with two sepia drawings by Caspar David Friedrich, images of windows—with or without human figures, starkly bare or draped with billowing fabric—filled up artists’ sketchbooks and portfolios and resonated through the art academies and annual exhibitions of Germany, Denmark, France, Russia, and the other northern countries.

In contrast to examples from earlier centuries, such as the celebrated works of the Dutch painter Johannes Vermeer, the early nineteenth-century pictures usually show the windows straight on, with views seen through them—pastoral and alpine views, views of sea and sky or moon and clouds, and urban views of rooftops, steeples, shipyards, or the skyline of Rome, where so many northern artists went to complete their studies. Sabine Rewald’s informative and perceptive texts set these works in the context of their creators’ lives and careers, apartments and studios, families and professional circles. Following the motif from Friedrich’s sepia drawings in the early 1800s through the flowering of Romanticism to the midcentury emergence of Realism in the works of Adolph Menzel, Rewald provides a much-needed perspective on this important period in Europe even as the works themselves, gathered together here for the first time, offer pure visual pleasure.

204 pages, 115 illustrations (110 in full color). 8'' x 10''. Paper.

Named one of The Books of the Year by Times Literary Supplement (Books of the Year).





  • 204 pages
  • 115 illustrations (110 in full color)
  • 8'' x 10''
  • Paper




EDITORIAL REVIEWS

“Rewald is right on target.”
      —The New Republic

“Rewald always makes something resonant of all the images, in prose which has its own modest poetry.”
      —Times Literary Supplement (Books of the Year)


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