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T.J. Clark

    T.J. Clark is an art historian and writer whose works offer a new form of art history that departs from traditional preoccupations with style and iconography. His books regard modern paintings as striving to articulate the social and political conditions of modern life. Clark's writings focus on the relationship between art and social forces, examining how paintings in the modern era reflect and critique social and political circumstances. His approach offers readers a deeper understanding of modern art as a commentary on the world.

    The Absolute Bourgeois
    • The Absolute Bourgeois

      Artists and Politics in France, 1848-1851

      • 224 pages
      • 8 hours of reading

      When this book and its companion volume, Image of the People , appeared in 1973, they were taken as a challenge to the way art was usually written about. "This book," said the Times , "is a product of that school of art history whose history is as well read as its art, and whilst it covers only a small area of time and place, Clark's approach and style are such that it throws up enough ideas and pleasures to illuminate far beyond its rather special circumstances. It is suffused with wit and pathetic irony."T. J. Clark's subject is painting and printmaking in the years following the 1848 Revolution in France, "a time", he argues, "when art and politics could not escape each other." The book tells the story of a handful of artists trying to take advantage of that unfamiliar—and short-lived—situation. Daumier and Millet are central, particularly in their dealings with the new State's art patronage machine; Delacroix figures as painter and diarist, in agonized withdrawal from the possibility of change, haunted by his own Liberty Guiding the People ; and Baudelaire is depicted, after a moment of tortured political involvement in the first months of the Republic, as the great poet of postrevolutionary despair.

      The Absolute Bourgeois