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Portrait Miniatures in Enamel

The Gilbert Collection

Sarah Coffin Bodo Hofstetter

$74.99

Hardback

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English
Philip Wilson Publishers Ltd
28 July 2000
A study of portrait miniatures in enamel from the Gilbert Collection. It proceeds from 17th-century portrait miniatures by German, French and Swiss enamelists to late-19th-century examples by Henry Bone and other English artists. The book contains comprehensive information on the art of enamels in Europe and England. It also examines the techniques and tools of enamelists and presents an overview of artists, patrons and sitters represented in this collection.

By:   ,
Imprint:   Philip Wilson Publishers Ltd
Country of Publication:   United Kingdom
Dimensions:   Height: 275mm,  Width: 210mm,  Spine: 21mm
Weight:   1.063kg
ISBN:   9780856675133
ISBN 10:   085667513X
Pages:   168
Publication Date:  
Audience:   General/trade ,  Professional and scholarly ,  ELT Advanced ,  Undergraduate
Format:   Hardback
Publisher's Status:   Active

Sarah Coffin , an independant decorative arts consultant, is a former Vice President of Sotheby's. Bodo Hofstetter is a senior specialist for portrait miniatures, gold boxes and objets de vertu at Christie's London/Paris.

Reviews for Portrait Miniatures in Enamel: The Gilbert Collection

Originally published in England in 1951 and reissued there in 1987 for Chaudhuri's 90th-birthday festivities, this first volume of the memoirs of one of India's most celebrated writers covers his childhood and formative years (the sequel, Thy Hand, Great Anarch!, appeared here last year). In encyclopedic detail, Chaudhuri recounts the day-to-day traditions, ceremonies, and events of the East Bengal (now Bangladesh) villages of his childhood, and of his student days in Calcutta. Encouraged to acquire knowlege by his enlightened upper-class Hindu parents, he devoured the great works of the Indian and European traditions, gaining familiarity with both cultures' history, philosophy, statecraft, military strategy, science, and literature. In his youth, he seesawed between calls (revolutionary and Gandhian) for an independent India and a slowly strengthening belief that gradually moving toward self-determination would better serve his country. He concludes here with an essay on Indian history in which he presciently theorizes that Indian culture will increasingly synthesize Western and Oriental traditions under the aegis - not of the British - but of the US and, eventually, an increasingly united Europe. Chaudhuri's archaic, often circumlocutory, prose and his penchant for untranslated Bengali and French expressions make this a tough read. For those interested in the huge subcontinent, though, the effort is a worthy one. (Kirkus Reviews)


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