Synopses & Reviews
William Hodges is well known as the artist who accompanied Cooks second voyage to the South Pacific as official landscape painter. This booka major reappraisal of his career and reputationpresents him as one of the most intriguing and controversial painters of his age. Foremost scholars consider Hodgess work in terms of the rise of ethnology, the investigation of Indian history, the encounter with peoples without history,” and the development of empirical science and rationalism.
Previous accounts of Hodges have often treated him secondarily to Cook and the history of geographical exploration. This volume redresses this situation in the light of recent developments in the history of eighteenth-century British art, which seek to understand art and aesthetics within a broader framework of social and imperial history.
About the Author
Geoff Quilley is curator of maritime art at the National Maritime Museum in Greenwich.