About this item
Highlights
- About the Author: Stephen Cheeke is a Senior Lecturer in English at the University of Bristol
- 224 Pages
- Art, Criticism & Theory
Description
About the Book
Ekphrasis is the technical term for the relationship between literary texts and the visual or the plastic arts, whereby writers write about paintings, photograpy or works of art. This is a concise introductionFrom the Back Cover
Writing for art is a concise introduction to the subject of ekphrasis, and the first study to offer a useful general survey of the larger philosophical and theoretical questions arising from the encounter of literary texts and artworks.
Stephen Cheeke offers close readings of poems and prose from the nineteenth and twentieth centuries alongside a generous amount of illustrations, covering a broad range of writing and theory about the relation of literary texts to the visual arts, and extending the subject of ekphrasis to include literary works on photography, as well as celebrated prose descriptions of artworks.
Review Quotes
Writing for art is an exigent text, is lucidly and engagingly written. Cheeke makes one want to read the books and poems and look at the pictures again.
valuable additions to the exponentially growing area of ekphrastic studiesAbout the Author
Stephen Cheeke is a Senior Lecturer in English at the University of Bristol