The Purchase of the Past


Book Description

Offering a broad and vivid survey of the culture of collecting from the French Revolution to the Belle Époque, The Purchase of the Past explores how material things became a central means of accessing and imagining the past in nineteenth-century France. By subverting the monarchical establishment, the French Revolution not only heralded the dawn of the museum age, it also threw an unprecedented quantity of artworks into commercial circulation, allowing private individuals to pose as custodians and saviours of the endangered cultural inheritance. Through their common itineraries, erudition and sociability, an early generation of scavengers established their own form of 'private patrimony', independent from state control. Over a century of Parisian history, Tom Stammers explores collectors' investments – not just financial but also emotional and imaginative – in historical artefacts, as well as their uncomfortable relationship with public institutions. In so doing, he argues that private collections were a critical site for salvaging and interpreting the past in a post-revolutionary society, accelerating but also complicating the development of a shared national heritage.




Catalogue d'une nombreuse collection d'estampes et dessins anciens, des maîtres de toutes les écoles, de portraits de personnages français et de tous les autres pays au nombre de plus de 30,000, d'une série d'estampes de peintres et graveurs français de la fin du XVIIIe siècle, de tableaux, et portraits historiques, et divers objets de curiosité, marbres et terre cuite, provenant du cabinet de m. Villenave ... [etc.] [1847].


Book Description