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Träfflista för sökning "AMNE:(HUMANITIES Arts) ;pers:(Weimarck Torsten)"

Sökning: AMNE:(HUMANITIES Arts) > Weimarck Torsten

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1.
  • Weimarck, Torsten, et al. (författare)
  • Introduktion
  • 2003
  • Ingår i: Design och konst – texter om gränser och överskridanden. Del 1: Texter före 1960. - 9187215314 ; 1, s. 11-40
  • Bokkapitel (övrigt vetenskapligt/konstnärligt)
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  • Weimarck, Torsten, et al. (författare)
  • Introduktion
  • 2003
  • Ingår i: Design och konst – texter om gränser och överskridanden. Del 2: Texter efter 1960. - 9187215330 ; 2, s. 11-19
  • Bokkapitel (övrigt vetenskapligt/konstnärligt)
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  • Axelsson, Linnéa, 1980- (författare)
  • Omfamningar. Rummets och gränsens meningar : Om Louise Bourgeois' och Rachel Whitereads verk
  • 2009
  • Doktorsavhandling (övrigt vetenskapligt/konstnärligt)abstract
    •   The aim of this dissertation is to create and convey an understanding of the significance of space and limits in the works of artists Louise Bourgeois and Rachel Whiteread. Focus is placed upon the physical and spiritual dimensions of their works of art. The primary material is made up by Louise Bourgeois’s and Rachel Whiteread’s sculptures, mainly six pieces: Louise Bourgeois’s Quarantania I (1949-1952), Fée Couturière (1963) and Cell VII (1998), Rachel Whiteread’s Untitled (1991), Untitled (Room) (1993) and Embankment (2005).    Louise Bourgeois was born in Paris, in 1911 (she has lived in New York since 1938), and Rachel Whiteread was born in London, in 1963. They belong to different generations and cultures, but come together through the use of a relation which I have perceived as a main theme in the artistry of both women. A relation, the exploration of which begins in the title Embraces. The study rests on a bodily structure, in method as well as in disposition. I have met the sculptures in the present room, struck up a dialogue with them. The chapters Birth, Body and Space bring the works of Louise Bourgeois and Rachel Whiteread together with an expansive historical and aesthetical material, in order to widen and deepen the dialogue on the significance of limits and space.
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  • Edling, Marta (författare)
  • Om måleriet i den klassicistiska konstteorin : Praktikens teoretiska position under 1700-talets andra hälft
  • 1999
  • Doktorsavhandling (övrigt vetenskapligt/konstnärligt)abstract
    • The character of the manual execution and material form of the art object were ascribed little value in the classicist theory of art. The practical act of painting was associated with handicraft and routine. The thrust of the theory was towards the literary and the philosophical and great value was ascribed to the artists' mental creativity and the treatment of the subject. It is my aim in this dissertation to investigate the separation between the manual/material and the mental/creative aspects in the art of painting and to clarify the role of practice within this theoretical tradition during the second half of the eighteenth century. The texts studied are written by leading art theorists: Reynolds, Mengs, Watelet, Levesque, Sulzer, von Hagedorn, Cochin and de Piles.One of the most important findings of the study is that the mental and the material were regarded not only as essentially different in kind, but that the relation between them also was of central importance. The picture was regarded as a combination of two effective parts: a carefully formed idea was realized, or produced, through the mediation of a material structure.Practice was thus seen as a tool of thought, and as such could be ascribed a complementary value. Consequently it was also possible, without contravening the established ranking of the mental and the material, to value and appreciate the material aspect for the important function it fulfilled in the production of the work as a whole.The practical and material aspect of painting should restrain the expressive powers of the brushwork and the handling of colours and subordinate itself to the mental creativity and the intellectual content. But it was recognized that paintings that did not live up to the highest aims was not for that reason necessarily "poor". In their categorizations of styles, genres, national schools of painting and individual artists' works it is possible to see that the theorists did allow more lowly and less highly valued kinds of paintings to be considered and appreciated, without risking any challenge to the established ranking order.The study shows that such deviations from the classical rules need not be regarded as temporary suspensions of the classical norm, rather, they represent a flexibility permitted within frames that remain intact. Some theorists exploited this freedom and took special interest in the manual and material components. Their texts demonstrate that it was possible to work upon the boundaries between the mental and material aspects.My study also suggests that, during the period studied, the idea of the art of painting as pictorial construction appear to be in question. Too much "artistry" in the technique and staging of the subject is said to obstruct the beholder's perception of the message that the picture has to convey. The distrust in the medium is indicated by these calls for an art both less theatrical and less concerned with its material make-up.
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10.
  • Weimarck, Ann-Charlotte, et al. (författare)
  • Lergodset från Höganäsbolaget 1832-1926
  • 2005
  • Bok (övrigt vetenskapligt/konstnärligt)abstract
    • Two hundred year's ago, Höganä's, a town situated in the north-west part of the county of Skåne, about 20 km north of the city of Helsingborg, had no local pottery tradition's. Höganä's wa's then a tiny fishing village that even lacked a harbour. Coal had now and then been quarried from an opencast mine and the local inhabitant's had collected it from the beach at low tide for their personal need's. When the mining industry started in 1797 and, with time, even the production of earthenware (1832), capital, labour, technology and pot design's were typically fetched from elsewhere. A's well a's the customer's. Nothing of thi's wa's to be found in Höganä's. The capital came from partie's interested in the mining, earthenware and brick industrie's. Here, in particular, Erik Ruuth, the Minister of Finance in Gustav III’'s parliament, wa's engaged. In 1786 he had bought the privilege's for mining coal in north-west Skåne, and at the same time established the earthenware factory, Ulfsunda, outside Stockholm where clay from the mining in Skåne wa's used. In 1792 large amount's of clay were found between thin seam's of coal in Höganä's and Ruuth brought in the mining engineer, Thoma's Stawford, from Newcastle in view of the coal mining that wa's the focu's of interest. Stawford brought with him not only mining technology to Höganä's from hi's native country but also something that resembled a town plan, including prototype's for worker's’ dwelling's. Coal mining in Höganä's wa's not a successful venture; the coal wa's difficult to mine and of poor quality and in the end attempt's were made to save the enterprise by starting to use the clay for the production of brick's and roofing tile's a's well – and from 1832 even earthenware. The kiln's were fired with coal from the mine's. In Höganä's there wa's hardly any local labour for either the mining or the earthenware factory. Russian prisoner's-of-war and children from orphanage's in Gothenburg, among other's, were used to work in the mine's. And at the start of the 1830's the population censu's show's that potter's from Ängelholm and other town's in Skåne had been induced to move here. But the potter's in the newly established pottery work's would hardly have produced pot's like those they had been making in their previou's home town's. The piece's that were to be produced in Höganä's differed from the pottery made in the neighbouring town's under the constraint's of the local guild's with their often old-fashioned, traditional idiom's. From the outset, the focu's wa's on good's that would suit the mas's-production of more anonymou's and standardized kind's of article's for the growing market for the middle-classe's. A's early a's 1798 Ruuth sold the factory in Ulfsunda and established the Helsingborg Stoneware Factory that at the time wa's the only one in Sweden to manufacture brown, salt-glazed stoneware, chiefly household good's. In Höganä's, production of thi's type of salt-glazed stoneware wa's also started in 1835. A's with the technology, most of the model's produced at the pottery during the first decade's came from England, either directly or indirectly. However, these did not come from Newcastle in the northeast, Stawford’'s home town, but from the west Midland's and the cluster of small town's that are today amalgamated into The Potterie's, the cradle of the English industrial revolution. Here there wa's a rich flora of, in particular, ceramic industrie's a's well a's a combination of coal, clay, technology, transportation route's, market's – condition's similar to those that were also to be found in Höganä's in the 1800's. But in actual fact it wa's a German porcelain potter, Carl Berger, who during the period of 1830-32 produced the first trial serie's of earthenware good's at the factory in Höganä's. Berger had most recently been working a's the foreman at the Gustavsberg factory where hi's task had been to experiment with flintware suitable for tableware and printed decoration. At Höganä's, Berger wa's to develop yellow lead-glazed ware that can be seen a's a simpler and more brittle imitation of the English flintware. A's far a's can be judged, Berger also contributed with a number of design's, reflecting English one's taken from hi's previou's activitie's at the Gustavsberg work's. During the very first year's of hi's employment at Höganä's simpler ornamental piece's were also being produced both in unglazed yellow earthenware and in black stoneware similar to basalt ware. The product's from Höganä's during the next two decade's consisted in both unglazed and lead-glazed earthenware and, from 1835, in salt-glazed ware in an increasing number of different design's. The earliest printed catalogue's (1835) cover a wide array of article's: drinking mug's, pot's with and without lip's, jam jar's, apothecary pot's, mustard pot's, serving dishe's, milk bowl's, soup terrine's, cooking pot's, flower pot's, bowl's, basin's, toilet set's, food basin's, chamber pot's, plate's, saucer's, butter dishe's, tea and coffee pot's, cream jug's, jelly mould's, soap dishe's, pipe bowl's, inkpot's, sand boxe's, small plate's, salad bowl's, deep dishe's, coffee cup's (with or without ear's), writing set's, flour sieve's, colander's, candlestick's, lamp's, salt cellar's, pepper pot's, doll's, water carafe's, oil flask's, mustard jar's, bidet's, medicine spoon's, sauce boat's, sugar bowl's… The list end's with a number of “toy's” (i.e. miniature's). In addition, there are brick's, roofing tile's, ornament's for building's etc. The range of model's on the whole goe's back to English prototype's in flintware which are also found in a number of variation's at quite a number of factorie's round the Baltic at thi's time. There are strong connection's particularly with the factorie's in Denmark such a's Ipsen's Enke, Herman A. Kähler a's well a's the Spietz and the Søholm work's on the Danish island of Bornholm out in the Baltic Sea. Moreover, many of the model's bear the stamp of the German architect, Georg Friedrich Hetsch, whose historicizing idiom, together with Bertel Thorvaldsen’'s sculpture had a considerable impact on Denmark during the first half of the 1800's. All thi's i's reflected in the production of the 1800's in Höganä's. In 1840, Johan Joachim Sjöcrona took over the management of the mining and earthenware production at the Höganä's factory, which time and again had been threatened with closure. He introduced a number of important social and financial reform's (school's, hospital's, pharmacie's, housing for the worker's, temperance movement's, librarie's, meeting-hall's etc.). It wa's also he who, in 1856, employed a young Danish artist, Ferdinand Ring, at the pottery. Ring wa's employed not a's a potter, but a's a sculptor and designer to produce prototype's for mas's production of, above all, variou's kind's of decorative object's, ornament's and architectural decoration's – rather typical task's at that time for a pottery that wa's aiming at meeting competition on a market larger than the one in Skåne. It wa's also probably Ring who lay behind the splendidly illustrated price catalogue over the 1859 production from the pottery. Thi's wa's the era for trade exhibition's with all they implied for internationalization and a growing importance for the visual form and marketing of the good's. The earthenware factory in Höganä's often participated successfully here, judging from the attention given by the pres's, but at the same time the financial gain wa's very small: the threat of closure loomed again in the minute's of the company board. Ferdinand Ring stayed on until 1869 and production continued, however, on a small scale. In 1889 Åke Nordenfelt entered the scene a's manager of the Höganä's company. Hi's private interest wa's one of contemporary ceramic art, in particular the polychrome majolica ware which, in a number of way's, wa's typical of the time. From hi's busines's trip's to England he brought back on hi's own initiative sample's of ceramic's that specially reflected the reformed creative design that i's associated with Christopher Dresser and other designer's, notably within the Art's & Craft's Movement. Such piece's, together with those associated with the contemporary development of artistic ceramic's in Denmark (Bindesbøll, Kähler and other's), came to be copied, on instruction from Nordenfelt, in a multitude of variation's at the Höganä's pottery. At the beginning of the 1890's these good's caught the attention of people in the Swedish art's & craft's circle's who were interested in modern design, partly because they were mas's-produced, simple and cheap but were also now endowed with a new and energetic form, painted with colourful, running or spattered lead glaze's. These article's were regarded a's a fruitful, artistically valuable alternative to the traditional, historicizing and often overloaded ornament's of that time. The production in Höganä's wa's more or les's unparalleled in Sweden. In order to modernize the old-fashioned pottery’'s rudimentary technical equipment and work routine's, Gudmund Dahl wa's employed a's work's foreman in 1893. He introduced a number of innovation's. For instance, he developed the polychrome glaze on a white background instead of the previou's one which wa's built on a transparent lead glaze on yellow clay. He also installed pyrometer's in the kiln's to register the temperature more exactly and started a routine where each design wa's given a number which wa's stamped onto the good's and which could be found in a design's book that wa's continuously updated when new design's were introduced. Dahl also trained the future designer, Albin Hamberg (born 1875) and the future glazing master, Sigfrid Johansson (born 1879). It wa's a combination of management’'s equally arbitrary and personal interest's, a handful of young colleague's’ eage
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