Janson's History of Art: The Western TraditionFor courses in the History of Art.
Rewritten and reorganized, this new edition weaves together the most recent scholarship, the most current thinking in art history, and the most innovative online supplements, including digital art library. Experience the new Janson and re-experience the history of art.
Long established as the classic and seminal introduction to art of the Western world, the Eighth Edition of Janson's History of Art is groundbreaking. When Harry Abrams first published the History of Art in 1962, John F. Kennedy occupied the White House, and Andy Warhol was an emerging artist. Janson offered his readers a strong focus on Western art, an important consideration of technique and style, and a clear point of view. The History of Art, said Janson, was not just a stringing together of historically significant objects, but the writing of a story about their interconnections, a history of styles and of stylistic change. Janson's text focused on the visual and technical characteristics of the objects he discussed, often in extraordinarily eloquent language. Janson's History of Art helped to establish the canon of art history for many generations of scholars.
The new Eighth Edition, although revised to remain current with new discoveries and scholarship, continues to follow Janson's lead in important ways: It is limited to the Western tradition, with a chapter on Islamic art and its relationship to Western art. It keeps the focus of the discussion on the object, its manufacture, and its visual character. It considers the contribution of the artist as an important part of the analysis. This edition maintains an organization along the lines established by Janson, with separate chapters on the Northern European Renaissance, the Italian Renaissance, the High Renaissance, and Baroque art, with stylistic divisions for key periods of the modern era. Also embedded in this edition is the narrative of how art has changed over time in the cultures that Europe has claimed as its patrimony. |
From inside the book
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... wall at Tiryns was a full 20 feet thick , and a second inner wall was just as impressive . Centuries later , the massiveness of these walls so awed the Greeks that they declared them the work of the Cyclopes , a mythical race of one ...
... wall . Unlike a self - supporting wall , the type Richardson used for the Marshall Field Wholesale Store , a curtain wall hangs from the lip of a horizontal beam at floor level on each story . Without this innovation , the base of the wall ...
... wall , usually to counteract the lateral thrust of a vault or arch within . In Gothic church architec- ture , a flying buttress is an arched bridge above the aisle roof that extends from the upper nave wall , where the lateral thrust of ...