Exploring The Invisible. Art, Science and the Spiritual

Exploring the Invisible shows how modern art expresses the first secular, scientific worldview in human history. This richly illustrated book describes two hundred years of scientific discoveries that inspired French Impressionist painters and Art Nouveau architects, as well as Surrealists in Europe, Latin America, and Japan.

Lynn Gamwell describes how the microscope and telescope expanded the artist's vision into realms unseen by the naked eye. In the nineteenth century, a strange and exciting world came into focus, one of microorganisms in a drop of water and spiral nebulas in the night sky. The world is also filled with forces that are truly unobservable, known only indirectly by their effects―radio waves, X-rays, and sound-waves. Gamwell shows how artists developed the pivotal style of modernism―abstract, non-objective art―to symbolize these unseen worlds. Starting in Germany with Romanticism and ending with international contemporary art, she traces the development of the visual arts as an expression of the scientific worldview in which humankind is part of a natural web of dynamic forces without predetermined purpose or meaning. Gamwell reveals how artists give nature meaning by portraying it as mysterious, dangerous, or beautiful.

The author Lynn Gamwell has included for the first time a painting from our gallery Italian artist Gianfranco Chiavacci, GF0296 from 1969, illustrating the Arte Programmata mouvement.

With a foreword by Neil deGrasse Tyson and a wealth of stunning images, this expanded edition of Exploring the Invisible draws on the latest scholarship to provide a global perspective on the scientists and artists who explore life on Earth, human consciousness, and the space-time universe.
 

Author: Lynn Gamwell

Foreword by Neil deGrasse Tyson

Hardcover, 528 pages

Publisher: Princeton University Press (March 17, 2020)

10 x 1.5 x 12.2 inches

Language: English

$50

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