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Colouring the Caribbean: Race and the Art of Agostino Brunias

(Hardback)

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Publishing Details

Full Title:

Colouring the Caribbean: Race and the Art of Agostino Brunias

Contributors:

By (Author) Mia L. Bagneris

ISBN:

9781526120458

Publisher:

Manchester University Press

Imprint:

Manchester University Press

Publication Date:

4th December 2017

Country:

United Kingdom

Classifications

Readership:

General

Main Subject:
Dewey:

759.5

Physical Properties

Physical Format:

Hardback

Number of Pages:

272

Dimensions:

Width 156mm, Height 234mm

Description

Colouring the Caribbean offers the first comprehensive study of Agostino Brunias's intriguing pictures of colonial West Indians of colour - so called 'Red' and 'Black' Caribs, dark-skinned Africans and Afro-Creoles, and people of mixed race - made for colonial officials and plantocratic elites during the late-eighteenth century. Although Brunias's paintings have often been understood as straightforward documents of visual ethnography that functioned as field guides for reading race, this book investigates how the images both reflected and refracted ideas about race commonly held by eighteenth-century Britons, helping to construct racial categories while simultaneously exposing their constructedness and underscoring their contradictions. The book offers provocative new insights about Brunias's work gleaned from a broad survey of his paintings, many of which are reproduced here for the first time. -- .

Reviews

In her lush visual analyses, Bagneris artfully deploys twenty-first century language to describe eighteenth-century picturesa mixed-race planter is dressed to beat the heat; skin tones range from dark chocolate to vanilla cream; and some figures may be pale, but, then again, not as pale as all that (1, 157, 23)as if to remind us that Bruniass paintings belong as much to our present as they do to the past. As scholars continue to explore his works and the visual culture of which they were a part, Bagneriss text is sure to become a key point of reference and departure.
Meredith Gamer, Columbia University, Collage Art Association, March 2019

'Bagneris's study of Brunias is energetic and stimulating.'
New West Indian Guide

'Bagneriss purpose is to complicate the univocal reading of these images and to interpret them as pro-slavery statements the paintings manifest all the complexity and ambivalence of the system of racial classification of late-eighteenth-century British colonialism.'
Perspective

'Bagneris text expands our understanding of Brunias paintings and is a praiseworthy publication on the relationship between visual culture and imperial expansion. [] Colouring the Caribbean will not only stand as the definitive text on Brunias, but will also serve as a model for future scholarship on race and representation in the colonial world.'
Association for Art History

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Author Bio

Mia L. Bagneris is Jesse Poesch Junior Professor of Art History at Tulane University

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