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Alfred Stevens
Alfred Stevens
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19th century art
A01=Teresa Sladen
Alfred Stevens's art
Arts and Crafts Movement
Author_Teresa Sladen
Britain
British art
Category=AGA
Category=AGB
Commercial art
Decorative art
English archives
English designers
English painters
English sculptors
eq_art-fashion-photography
eq_bestseller
eq_isMigrated=1
eq_isMigrated=2
eq_nobargain
eq_non-fiction
Fine art
High brow
Hugh Stannus Alfred Stevens
Humanist
Italian archives
Italian Renaissance
Low brow
Modernism
New Sculpture
Office of Works
Second World War
St. Paul's Cathedral
Wellington Monument
Product details
- ISBN 9781916237865
- Dimensions: 241 x 292mm
- Publication Date: 08 Apr 2025
- Publisher: The Burlington Press
- Publication City/Country: GB
- Product Form: Hardback
The first book on the English sculptor, designer, and painter Alfred Stevens
Few people were aware of Alfred Stevens’s art during his lifetime (1817–1875), but following his early death while still at work on the Wellington Monument in St Paul’s Cathedral, this changed. There was a furious outcry that a man of such genius should have been treated so harshly by the Office of Works during the protracted course of that project. As a result of a campaign, largely led by fellow artists, he became widely known, and between then and the outbreak of the Second World War he was hailed as one of greatest Humanist artists Britain had ever known, a judgement largely based on his grander works of figurative art and his superb draughtsmanship. But then, with the rise of Modernism in the early twentieth century, he came to be seen as someone who had merely aped the art of the Italian Renaissance. His work was dismissed as the last gasp of a movement that was now dead.
What those who extolled his work in the late nineteenth and early twentieth century, as well as those who denigrated it in the years that followed, failed to see, however, was that he was a great innovator, someone who had played a crucial part in the development of British art in the nineteenth century. This was achieved in two ways: on the one hand, by designing objects such as stoves, painted decoration, and monumental sculpture whose form was linked to that of the surrounding architecture, he pointed the way to the New Sculpture that was to emerge at the end of the century; on the other, by blurring the line that was then universally drawn between “fine” and “decorative” art, he acted as a precursor of the Arts and Crafts Movement.
The study of his work has been hampered by the paucity of documents, scattered in archives in England and Italy, which is one reason why there has been no monograph since Hugh Stannus’s Alfred Stevens (1891).
Few people were aware of Alfred Stevens’s art during his lifetime (1817–1875), but following his early death while still at work on the Wellington Monument in St Paul’s Cathedral, this changed. There was a furious outcry that a man of such genius should have been treated so harshly by the Office of Works during the protracted course of that project. As a result of a campaign, largely led by fellow artists, he became widely known, and between then and the outbreak of the Second World War he was hailed as one of greatest Humanist artists Britain had ever known, a judgement largely based on his grander works of figurative art and his superb draughtsmanship. But then, with the rise of Modernism in the early twentieth century, he came to be seen as someone who had merely aped the art of the Italian Renaissance. His work was dismissed as the last gasp of a movement that was now dead.
What those who extolled his work in the late nineteenth and early twentieth century, as well as those who denigrated it in the years that followed, failed to see, however, was that he was a great innovator, someone who had played a crucial part in the development of British art in the nineteenth century. This was achieved in two ways: on the one hand, by designing objects such as stoves, painted decoration, and monumental sculpture whose form was linked to that of the surrounding architecture, he pointed the way to the New Sculpture that was to emerge at the end of the century; on the other, by blurring the line that was then universally drawn between “fine” and “decorative” art, he acted as a precursor of the Arts and Crafts Movement.
The study of his work has been hampered by the paucity of documents, scattered in archives in England and Italy, which is one reason why there has been no monograph since Hugh Stannus’s Alfred Stevens (1891).
Teresa Sladen is an authority on Victorian architecture and art. She has served as a director of The Victorian Society and The Mausolea and Monuments Trust and was a founder member of the latter. Her publications include Churches, 1870–1914 (Studies in Victorian Architecture and Design, Volume 3). Sladen has also published in Burlington Magazine.
Alfred Stevens
€82.99
