ABSTRACT

This title was first published in 2002. Adrian Stokes was a British painter and writer whose books on art have been allowed to go out of print despite their impact on Modernist culture. This new edition of The Quattro Cento and The Stones of Rimini presents the original texts of 1932 and 1934 and furnishes them with introductions by David Carrier and Stephen Kite that will help readers grasp the structure and significance of what have become Stokes' most widely cited and influential books. Written as parts of an incomplete trilogy, The Quattro Cento and The Stones of Rimini mark a crossroad in the transition from late Victorian to Modernist conceptions of art, especially sculpture and architecture. Stokes continued, even expanded, John Ruskin's and Walter Pater's belief that art is essential to the individual's proper psychological development but wove their teaching into a new aesthetic shaped by his experience of psychoanalysis and recent innovations in literature, dance, and the visual arts. This volume will be of interest to those concerned with art criticism, aesthetics and psychoanalysis, as well as the art and architecture of the Renaissance and Modern periods. Supported by the Henry Moore Foundation in memory of David Sylvester.

chapter |20 pages

INTRODUCTION TO STONES OF RIMINI

chapter |6 pages

Illustrations

chapter 1|13 pages

Stone and Water

chapter |1 pages

The Pleasures of Limestone

chapter |1 pages

A Geological Medley

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The Pleasures of Limestone

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A Geological Medley

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The Pleasures of Limestone

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A Geological Medley

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The Pleasures of Limestone

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A Geological Medley

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The Pleasures of Limestone

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A Geological Medley

chapter |3 pages

The Pleasures of Limestone

chapter |1 pages

A Geological Medley

chapter |3 pages

The Pleasures of Limestone

chapter |1 pages

A Geological Medley

chapter |1 pages

The Pleasures of Limestone

chapter |1 pages

A Geological Medley

chapter |1 pages

The Pleasures of Limestone

chapter |1 pages

A Geological Medley

chapter |3 pages

The Pleasures of Limestone

chapter |1 pages

A Geological Medley

chapter |1 pages

The Pleasures of Limestone

chapter |1 pages

A Geological Medley

chapter |1 pages

The Pleasures of Limestone

chapter |1 pages

A Geological Medley

chapter |1 pages

The Pleasures of Limestone

chapter |1 pages

A Geological Medley

chapter |1 pages

The Pleasures of Limestone

chapter 3|1 pages

The Mediterranean

chapter |49 pages

The Mediterranean

chapter 4|11 pages

Carving, Modelling and Agostino

chapter |1 pages

Carving, Modelling

chapter |1 pages

Carving, Modelling and Agostino

chapter |1 pages

Carving, Modelling

chapter |7 pages

Carving, Modelling and Agostino

chapter |1 pages

Carving, Modelling and Agostino

chapter 1|16 pages

Donatello

chapter |1 pages

Carving, Modelling

chapter |2 pages

Carving, Modelling and Agostino

chapter |1 pages

Carving, Modelling

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Carving, Modelling and Agostino

chapter |1 pages

Carving, Modelling

in spite of their manifold contrasts, gives rise the distinctive non-plastic aim: and this idea was all, by the equality of light on stone, an In Piero by the religious reverence for

chapter |37 pages

Carving, Modelling and Agostino

chapter 5|1 pages

Chapter Five

The Tempio: First Visit

chapter |49 pages

The Tempio: First Visit

chapter 6|6 pages

Chapel of the Planets

meaning

chapter |1 pages

Chapel of

surf, monoliths beyond the clutch of soul,

chapter |14 pages

Chapel of the Planets

chapter |1 pages

firstc ountry to enter the Industrial Age. At the

or rationalized, projection. Analogy to human

chapter |3 pages

Chapel of the Planets

: perhaps the machine is the instrument of the

chapter |1 pages

Chapel of

chapter |24 pages

XIII. At Brescia

chapter |12 pages

VII. The Final Picture

chapter |8 pages

Index

chapter |1 pages

SUGGESTED FURTHER READING

chapter |2 pages

THE QUATTRO CENTO STONES OF RIMINI