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Titel The people's galleries : art museums and exhibitions in Britain, 1800-1914
Auteur G. Waterfield
Plaats van uitgave Londen
Uitgever Yale university press
Jaar van uitgave 2015
ISBN 9780300209846
Annotatie XI, 370 p. : ill. ; 29 cm
Trefwoorden museumbeleid, tentoonstellingen, beeldende kunst, musea, museumcollecties, collectievorming, mecenaat, publiek, Verenigd Koninkrijk, geschiedenis (vorm), negentiende eeuw, 1900-1910

Niet aanwezig in deze bibliotheek. Wel bij andere bibliotheken, zie

Samenvatting
History of British art museums begins in the early 19th century where the National Gallery and the South Kensington Museum (now the Victoria and Albert Museum) in London may have been at the center of activity, but where museums in cities such as Glasgow, Leeds, Liverpool, Manchester, and Nottingham were immensely popular and attracted enthusiastic audiences. Publication traces the rise of art museums in Britain through World War I, focusing on the phenomenon of municipal galleries arguing that these regional museums represented a new type of institution: an art gallery for a working-class audience, appropriate for the rapidly expanding cities and shaped by liberal ideals. As their broad appeal weakened with the new century, they adapted and became more conventional. Using a wide range of sources, the book studies the patrons and the publics, the collecting policies, the temporary exhibitions, and the architecture of these institutions, as well as the complex range of reasons for their foundation.