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Colonial War

Lady Butler: painting, travel and war by Catherine Wynne

Long before PTSD was an acknowledged and researched condition, Lady Elizabeth Butler, as a war painter, had been documenting the agony, tyranny, shock and horrors of war through her paintbrush. A consummate artist, she left behind a treasure trove of art and manuscripts, most of which now finds place in this book by Catherine Wynne. Read on…

A ‘recovery’ project drawing on unpublished letters and diaries, this is the first biography of Victorian Britain’s famous war artist, Elizabeth Thompson Butler. She transformed war art by depicting conflict trauma, decades before its designation as a medical condition. Married to an officer in the British army, she traveled with her husband’s military postings. Her art is prescient in its concern about the implications of foreign military intervention and champions the ordinary soldier and the dispossessed. Lady Butler is a story of travel and history, of war and conflict, of Italy of the Risorgimento, of the London art world where she achieved celebrity and negotiated the difficulties of being a female artist in a male-dominated domain, and of imperial travel. Her biography reveals a figure whose perspective on war is modern, whose confidence in achieving success in the masculine field of battle art taps into contemporary debates, and whose work provokes a rethinking of the post-imperial world.

From the book description

Readers who like to learn more about the colonial world, especially imperial Britain, will like this collection of visuals of their foreign policy, which was war, to be a thrilling, and some times soul-stirring journey. Not for the faint-hearted! Widely available at most large book stores.

Categories
Colonial Decorative Arts Museums Pottery

Ceramics: 400 Years of British Collecting in 100 Masterpieces by Patricia F. Ferguson

Happy New Year! Wow! What a treat! While the British Empire was busy plundering its colonies, they brought back all these artifacts which find places in various museums around the world, but of course, the most significant aspect is, plundering it was, and no nation has a right to forcefully remove from a people elements of their heritage. Not all were forcibly taken, admitted. This has been a widely accepted as a global principle. Regardless, the sad and unfortunate motivations for this collections should not stop you from enjoying this beautiful collection – an ode to the original creators of ceramics artwork around the world.

Winner of the 2017 American Ceramics Circle Book of the Year Award

The aim of this publication is to introduce the rich and varied ceramics in the National Trust’s vast and encyclopedic collection, numbering approximately 75,000 artifacts, housed in 250 historic properties in England, Wales, and Northern Ireland. One hundred key pieces have been selected from this rich treasure trove, each contributing to our knowledge of ceramic patronage and history, revealing the very personal stories of ownership, display, taste, and consumption.

The selection includes the following Continental wares: “Red-figure” wares, Italian armorial tablewares, Dutch Delft from the Greek A factory – owned by Adrianus Kocx – Chinese Kraak ware, Dehua ware, Japanese Kakiemon-style and Imari-style tablewares and garnitures, Meissen table sculpture by Johann Joachim Kändler and tablewares attributed to Adam Friedrich von Löwenfinck, Castelli fayence from the Grue workshop, and wares from the following porcelain manufactories: Doccia, Vienna, Vincennes, Sèvres, Dihl, and Feulliet.
English pottery and porcelain includes delftware, salt-glazed stoneware, creamware, Wedgwood Black Basalt and Etruscan ware, Chelsea, Bow, Worcester, and Derby porcelain, Minton China, De Morgan, and Martin ware.
And from the Americas, Pueblo ware.

Many are published for the first time, sometimes illustrated in their original interiors. Collectively, the selection surveys patterns of ceramic collecting by the British aristocracy and gentry over a four hundred year period.

From the book description

Readers fond of collectors’ items are sure to enjoy looking at the stunning pictures and holding back the desire to touch, own, and possess these works of art. A desire that the looters could not resist. Available at select book stores.