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Public display, private glory: Sir John Fleming Leicester's gallery of British art in early nineteenth-century England

Title
Public display, private glory: Sir John Fleming Leicester's gallery of British art in early nineteenth-century England
Authors
Chun D.
Ewha Authors
전동호
SCOPUS Author ID
전동호scopus
Issue Date
2001
Journal Title
Journal of the History of Collections
ISSN
0954-6650JCR Link
Citation
Journal of the History of Collections vol. 13, no. 2, pp. 175 - 189
Publisher
Oxford University Press
Indexed
AHCI; SCOPUS scopus
Document Type
Review
Abstract
Sir John Fleming Leicester (1762-1827), created Baron de Tabley in 1826, is best remembered now for his distinguished patronage of J. M. W. Turner. Described in his obituary as 'the greatest patron of the native school of painting that our Island ever possessed', he was an enthusiastic patron and collector of contemporary British art. Also, he was so concerned with displaying and exhibiting his collection of British painting that he built special picture galleries at his residences in London and in Cheshire. In fact, it is the enormous contemporary publicity of his private gallery of British art in London that bolstered his reputation. In addition to unearthing a body of contemporary accounts of the picture gallery, this article aims to analyse the cultural politics of Sir John's patronage of British art by exploring the ambivalent notion of the public in relation to his private agenda. © Oxford University Press 2001.
DOI
10.1093/jhc/13.2.175
Appears in Collections:
일반대학원 > 미술사학과 > Journal papers
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