Observations on the River Wye And Several Parts of South Wales, & c., Relative Chiefly to Picturesque Beauty: Made in the Summer of the Year 1770
Editorial Reviews Book Description In its first publication since 1820, Observations on the River Wye is the work that launched the picturesque movement in art, changing forever our ways of looking at the landscape.
William Gilpin (1724-1804) began traveling in search of picturesque scenes in the 1770s. His five books of journeys not only record what he saw, but evaluate every scene with critical rigor. With these books, Gilpin can be thought of as the father of the picturesque. Observations on the River Wye was the first of Gilpin's books, representing a founding text of the romantic movement. It is illustrated with 17 aquatints that demonstrate the essentials of particular landscapes-essentially, they are lessons in how to look. To read Gilpin and to look at his prints is to enter an entirely 18th-century world, whose influence on the way we look and think today is uncanny.
Richard Humphreys, a curator at the Tate Gallery, assesses Gilpin's impact as well as his continuing legacy.
Observations on the River Wye And Several Parts of South Wales, & c., Relative Chiefly to Picturesque Beauty: Made in the Summer of the Year 1770,William Gilpin,Richard Humphreys,Pallas Athene (UK),1843680041,Art & Art Instruction,Description And Travel,Europe - Great Britain - General,General,Subjects & Themes - Landscapes,Travel
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