Front cover image for Imagining the Pacific : in the wake of the Cook voyages

Imagining the Pacific : in the wake of the Cook voyages

In this book Bernard Smith explores in more depth the issues first dealt with in his classic European Vision and the South Pacific. He continues his careful examination of how European artists and scientists travelling to the Pacific during the time of Cook's voyages were stimulated to see the world in new and creative ways. In analysing intensely personal responses to a newly accessible environment, Bernard Smith shows how science, topography and travel had an impact on current pictorial genres, how an empirical naturalism affected long-standing classical conventions, and how difficult it was for the artists to portray people and places they knew little about
Print Book, English, 1992
Yale University Press, New Haven, 1992
Art
xiii, 262 pages : illustrations (some color) ; 30 cm
9780300050530, 0300050534
24670086
1. Art in the Service of Science and Travel
2. The Intellectual and Artistic Framework of Captain Cook's Voyages
3. Art as Information
4. Portraying Pacific People
5. William Hodges and English Plein-air Painting
6. Coleridge's Ancient Mariner and Cook's Second Voyage
7. Style, Information and Image in the Art of Cook's Voyages
8. Constructing 'Pacific' People
9. Greece and the Colonisation of the Pacific
10. Cook's Posthumous Reputation