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    <title><string language="fre"><![CDATA[﻿British Capricci: from the Picturesque to the Sublime﻿ / Hélène Ibata]]></string></title>
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        <string language="fre"><![CDATA[British Capricci: from the Picturesque to the Sublime / Hélène Ibata, in colloque international organisé, sous la responsabilité scientifique de Muriel Adrien, Melissa Percival et Axel Hémery, par l’Université Toulouse Jean Jaurès et l’Université d’Exeter. Toulouse, Musée Paul-Dupuy, 3-4 décembre 2015.
﻿British adaptations of the capriccio genre may be seen not only as a response to the contemporary British discourse on the sublime and the picturesque, but also as
the reflection of a significant shift in sensibility. While in the second half of the eighteenth century, a ‘picturesque’ approach prevailed, with ruins being used as pleasing -albeit melancholy- sources of reverie and association of ideas, a more tragic sense of history emerged at the beginning of the nineteenth century, and ruin painting became more frequently a vehicle of the sublime. In the works of Joseph Gandy, J.M.W. Turner and Charles Robert Cockerell, among others, ruins are dramatized, often emptied of human presence, and invested with the terrifying awareness of the transience of all things. In these dramatic capricci, architectural excess becomes overwhelming rather than exuberant, and vestiges are often “ruins of empires”, reminders of the ravages of time and of the vanity of all human achievements. I would like to explore
this evolution and show in particular how with artists seeking the sublime, the capriccio becomes an effective means to convey the tension between visual representation and what exceeds it, which is central to this aesthetic mode.]]></string></description>
    <keyword><string language="fre"><![CDATA[peinture (18e siècle)]]></string></keyword><keyword><string language="fre"><![CDATA[art (Grande-Bretagne)]]></string></keyword><keyword><string language="fre"><![CDATA[sublime (art)]]></string></keyword><keyword><string language="fre"><![CDATA[romantisme (art)]]></string></keyword><keyword><string language="fre"><![CDATA[ruines (esthétique)]]></string></keyword><keyword><string language="fre"><![CDATA[Joseph Michael Gandy (1771–1843)]]></string></keyword><keyword><string language="fre"><![CDATA[Charles Robert Cockerell (1788-1863)]]></string></keyword><keyword><string language="fre"><![CDATA[Giambattista Piranesi (1720-1778)]]></string></keyword><keyword><string language="fre"><![CDATA[caprices (art)]]></string></keyword>
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NOTE:Agrégée d'anglais et ancienne élève de l'École Normale Supérieure de Fontenay St Cloud, Hélène Ibata est, depuis 2002, maître de conférences au département d'anglais de l'Université de Strasbourg (France) et membre de l'équipe de recherche "Savoirs dans l'espace anglophone : représentations, culture, histoire" (SEARCH). Ses domaines de recherches portent sur les arts visuels (Grande-Bretagne), l'histoire des idées, la peinture de la période romantique, notamment l'oeuvre de William Blake et de J. M. W. Turner. > Voir sa page personnelle (Search).   
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