Kimberly A. Orcutt is Executive Editor of Nineteenth-Century Art Worldwide. She has served as curator of American art at the Brooklyn Museum, the New-York Historical Society, and Harvard Art Museums. She is the author of Power and Posterity: American Art at Philadelphia's 1876 Centennial Exhibition.
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Description
Introduction: The Dream of Art for the People 1 1 Engravings: To Lead Taste or to Follow? 29 2 Selecting Artworks for Distribution: From Democracy to Oligarchy 63 3 The Free Gallery: Art, Anxiety, and Revolution 99 4 Distributions and Membership: "Messengers and Missionaries of Art"? 122 5 The Bulletin: From Education to Provocation 155 6 Slowly, Then All at Once: The Demise of the American Art-Union 180 Acknowledgments 209 Appendix A: American Art-Union Resources 211 Appendix B: American Art-Union Officers and Committee of Management, 1839-51 213 Appendix C: American Art-Union Engravings Distributed to All Members 216 Notes 219 Sources Cited 253 Index 271
Orcutt's comprehensive, lucid and fair-minded history of the American Art-Union, the most important art patron of the nineteenth century, defends it as a utopian enterprise that failed when the idealism embedded in its institutional structure had unintended consequences. This book is likely to become a standard reference on the Art-Union and its widespread impact.---Wendy Jean Katz, author of A True American: William Walcutt, Nativism, and Nineteenth-Century Art

