Cape Impressionism: a South African vision (part 2)
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- Опубликовано: 9 фев 2025
- Cape Impressionism was a South African art movement of the early and mid twentieth century which brought European Impressionist influences and techniques to bear on South African subjects. The first part of this video explored the history of Cape Impressionism from its early twentieth-century origins to around 1940. This second part picks up the story from the mid-twentieth century onwards.
[2428] Published 9 February 2025.
SOURCES
F. L. Alexander. Art in South Africa: Painting Sculpture and Graphic Work since 1900 / Kuns in Suid-Afrika: Skilderkuns Beeldhoukuns en Grafiek sedert 1900 (Cape Town: A. A. Balkema, 1960).
Marion Arnold. Women and Art in South Africa (New York: St Martin’s Press, 1996).
Esmé Berman. The Story of South African Painting (Cape Town & Rotterdam: A. A. Balkema, 1975).
Esmé Berman. Art and Artists of South Africa: An Illustrated Biographical Dictionary and Historical Survey of Painters, Sculptors and Graphic Artists since 1875 (Cape Town: A. A. Balkema, 1983).
Directory of Museums and Art Galleries in British Africa and in Malta Cyprus and Gibraltar (London: The Museums Association, 1933).
Jeremy Foster. Washed with Sun: Landscape and the Making of White South Africa (Pittsburgh: University of Pittsburgh Press, 2008).
Charles Holme (ed.). Art of the British Empire Overseas (London: The Studio, 1917).
Murray Schoonraad. Nuwe Groep / New Group 1938-1954 (Cape Town: Suid-Afrikaanse Nasionale Kunsmuseum / South African National Gallery, 1988).
Anna Tietze. A History of the Iziko South African National Gallery (Cape Town: University of Cape Town Press, 2017).
T. Martin Wood. 'Dutch pictures for South Africa', The Studio, vol. 58, issue 242, May 1913, pp. 271-282.