
Plain Style
Protestant Theology in the History of Design
David Brett(Author)
Lutterworth Press
Published on 1. September 2005
Book
Paperback/Softback
208 pages
978-0-7188-3032-8 (ISBN)
Description
A study of the effects upon design, principally architecture, of the Reformation and the associated rejection of imagery in worship. The Plain Style examines both the development of aesthetic theory and its practical applications in a number of different environments. The Author traces the way in which ideas about simplicity, clarity and lack of ornamentation expressed themselves in art and architecture, and uses an extensive range of examples, from the British Isles, and particularly Northern Ireland, and from North America. In doing so he shows how Protestant, and especially iconoclastic Puritan, ideology influenced design. The external impact was reflected in an inner change in the psychic landscape, and its applications were therefore to be found well beyond the visual. The book, heavily illustrated with examples, shows how the effect can be found in areas like machinery design, and the impact of 'the Plain Style' on Puritan ideas and, for example, on Shaker furniture design. The study is divided into six chapters, moving from broader issues, such as an imageless worship and thought, to more specific areas. In his discussion of Ulster Protestant culture, Brett dismantles the conception that deep cultural contrasts exist between Protestants and Republicans. The author does not just depict the differences between Protestant and Republican cultures, but more importantly, the ways in which the seeming contrasts are manipulated. Indeed, it is through such a wide scope of topics that Brett emphasises a more creative Protestant lineage, in order to break down what Brett views as self-destructive models of thought within Protestant and Republican communities. While the literary and rhetorical aspects of the Plain Style have been studied, the author breaks new ground with this important book on the visual aesthetics of the Plain Style and makes a valuable contribution to cultural history and to the history of ideas.
More details
Language
English
Place of publication
Cambridge
United Kingdom
Publishing group
James Clarke & Co Ltd
Target group
College/higher education
Dimensions
Height: 234 mm
Width: 156 mm
Weight
380 gr
ISBN-13
978-0-7188-3032-8 (9780718830328)
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 Classification
Person
David Brett is a design historian and former university lecturer, based at the School of Art and Design in Belfast. He was awarded a Ph.D from the Royal College of Art and it is his deep-rooted interest in architecture, objects and modernisation which inspired him to write this original work. Brett is also married with two children and has lived for many years in Northern Ireland.
Content
List of Illustrations; Preface to the Second Edition; Introduction; Imageless Worship; Imageless Thought?; The Plain Style; Heaven's Vernacular; The Anabaptists; The Ephrata Community; The Quakers; The Colonial Style; The Shakers; The Technical Culture: Prologomena to Modernity; Deep Structures: The Geology of Culture; Bibliography; Index.