This book examines the renowned portrait collection assembled by C. P. E. Bach, J. S. Bach's second son.
One of the most celebrated German composers of the eighteenth century, C. P. E. Bach spent decades assembling an extensive portrait collection of some four hundred music-related items-from oil paintings to engraved prints. The collection was dispersed after Bach's death in 1788, but with Annette Richards's painstaking reconstruction, the portraits once again present a vivid panorama of music history and culture, reanimating the sensibility and humor of Bach's time. Far more than a mere multitude of faces, Richards argues, the collection was a major part of the composer's work that sought to establish music as an object of aesthetic, philosophical, and historical study.
The Temple of Fame and Friendship brings C. P. E. Bach's collection to life, giving readers a sense of what it was like for visitors to tour the portrait gallery and experience music in rooms thick with the faces of friends, colleagues, and forebears. She uses the collection to analyze the "portraitive" aspect of Bach's music, engaging with the influential theories of Swiss physiognomist Johann Caspar Lavater. She also explores the collection as a mode of cultivating and preserving friendship, connecting this to the culture of remembrance that resonates in Bach's domestic music. Richards shows how the new music historiography of the late eighteenth century, rich in anecdote, memoir, and verbal portrait, was deeply indebted to portrait collecting and its negotiation between presence and detachment, fact and feeling.
Sprache
Verlagsort
Verlagsgruppe
The University of Chicago Press
Zielgruppe
Produkt-Hinweis
Fadenheftung
Gewebe-Einband
Illustrationen
8 color plates, 108 halftones, 27 line drawings
Maße
Höhe: 261 mm
Breite: 190 mm
Dicke: 27 mm
Gewicht
ISBN-13
978-0-226-80626-6 (9780226806266)
Copyright in bibliographic data and cover images is held by Nielsen Book Services Limited or by the publishers or by their respective licensors: all rights reserved.
Schweitzer Klassifikation
Annette Richards is Given Foundation Professor in the Humanities and university organist at Cornell University, where she is also professor of music and director of the Cornell-Westfield Center for Historical Keyboard Studies. She is the author of The Free Fantasiaand the Musical Picturesque; the editor of C. P. E Bach Studies; coeditor, with Mark Franko, of Acting on the Past; and the founding editor of Keyboard Perspectives.
Introduction
Chapter 1 Exhibiting: The Bach Gallery and the Art of Self-Fashioning
Chapter 2 Collecting: C. P. E. Bach and Portrait Mania
Chapter 3 Speculation: Likeness, Resemblance, and Error
Chapter 4 Character: Faces, Physiognomy, and Time
Chapter 5 Friendship: Portrait Drawings and the Trace of Modern Life
Chapter 6 Feeling: Objects of Sensibility and the "Portrait of Myself"
Chapter 7 Memorializing: Portraits and the Invention of Music History
Acknowledgments
Notes
Bibliography
Index