1st Edition

Learning to Look at Sculpture

By Mary Acton Copyright 2014
372 Pages
by Routledge

372 Pages
by Routledge

Learning to Look at Sculpture is an accessible guide to the study and understanding of three dimensional art. Sculpture is all around us: in public parks, squares, gardens and railway stations, as part of the architecture of buildings, or when used in commemoration and memorials and can even be considered in relation to furniture and industrial design. This book encourages you to consider the... Read more

Introduction 1. The Influence of the Classical Tradition and the Development of Sculptural Types 2. The Free Standing Figure and its Legacy 3. Group Sculpture - The Interaction between Forms 4. Relief Sculpture. Communication and Narrative Power 5. The Bust. Sculpture and the Portrait 6. Sculpture, Memory and Commemoration 7. Sculpture and its Setting 8. Sculpture and Drawing 9. Epilogue and Conclusion. Sculpture and Design: The idea of Three Dimensional Design as Sculpture

Biography

Mary Acton was Course Director of the Undergraduate Diploma and Advanced Diploma in the History of Art at Continuing Education, University of Oxford. She continues to teach at the University of Oxford and works as a freelance lecturer. She is the author of the bestselling Learning to Look at Paintings (1997, 2009) and Learning to Look at Modern Art (2004).