The Science of Art: Optical themes in western art from Brunelleschi to Seurat

Basic Information

Author(s):
Kemp, Martin
Title:
The Science of Art: Optical themes in western art from Brunelleschi to Seurat
Publisher:
Yale University Press, New Haven
Category:
Critical Analysis
Date:
1992
Size:
11" x 10" x 1"
Edition:
1
Page Count:
375
ISBN #:
9780300043372
Library of Congress #:
88033767
Number of copies:
1
Inventory #:
10749

Description

In this pathbreaking and richly illustrated book, Martin Kemp examines the major optically oriented examples of artistic theory and practice from Brunelleschi’s invention of perspective and its exploitation by Leonardo and Durer to the beginnings of photography. In a discussion of color theory, Kemp traces two main traditions of color science: the Aristotelian tradition of primary colors and Newton’s prismatic theory that influenced Runge, Turner, and Seurat. His monumental book not only adds to our understanding of a large group of individual works of art but also provides valuable information for all those interested in the interaction between science and art. “This beautifully made volume . . . shows us the unity of the visual study of nature―the exalted mutual task of Renaissance science and art.”―Scientific American