Contents

portrait in oil of John Ruskin Fig. 1.6 John Everett Millais, John Ruskin (1853–4). Oil on canvas, 71.3 × 60.8 cm. Ashmolean Museum, Oxford. Photo: © Ashmolean Museum, University of Oxford.

Ruskin51ݶ Ecologies: Figures of Relation from Modern Painters to The Storm-Cloud

Edited by Kelly Freeman and Thomas Hughes

 

Preface by Kelly Freeman and Thomas Hughes

Introduction: ‘There Is No Wealth But Life’ by Kelly Freeman and Thomas Hughes

Chapter 1 ‘Ruskin and Lichen’ by Kate Flint

Chapter 2 ‘The Balcony: Queer Temporality inThe Stones of Veniceand Proust’ by Thomas Hughes

Chapter 3 ‘A Pattern in Time: Tracing the Arabesque from Ruskin to Bridget Riley’ by Moran Sheleg

Chapter 4 ‘Feeling Gothic: Affect and Aesthetics in Ruskin51ݶ Architectural Theory’ by Timothy Chandler

Chapter 5 ‘From Earth Veil to Wall Veil: Ruskin, Morris, Webb, and the Arts and Crafts Surface’ by Stephen Kite

Chapter 6 ‘The Osteological Line’ by Kelly Freeman

Chapter 7 ‘Forms of Intermediate Being’ by Jeremy Melius

Chapter 8 ‘Rosa51ݶ Fall: From Picturesque to Ruskin51ݶ Anti-Turner, Salvator Rosa in Victorian Britain’ by Giulia Martina Weston

Chapter 9 ‘Ruskin, Whistler, and the Climate of Art in 1884’ by Nicholas Robbins

Chapter 10 ‘Molar Heights and Molecular Lowlands: Scale and Imagination in Ruskin and John Tyndall’ by Polly Gould

Chapter 11 ‘Seeing Stars of Light: Plate Three ofThe Seven Lamps of Architecture’ by Courtney Skipton Long

Chapter 12 “‘Stray Flowers”? The Role of Illustration in the Critical Argument of The Stones of Venice’ by Stephen Bann

Chapter 13 ‘“That Golden Stain of Time”:The Ethics of The Dust from Ruskin to Jorge Otero-Pailos’ by Lawrence Gasquet

Chapter 14 ‘The Afterlife of Dying Buildings: Ruskin and Preservation in the Twenty-First Century’ by Ryan Roark

Notes on Contributors

 

Citations