New Book | Picturing Landscape in an Age of Extraction
From The University of Chicago Press:
Stephanie O’Rourke, Picturing Landscape in an Age of Extraction: Europe and Its Colonial Networks, 1780–1850 (Chicago: The University of Chicago Press, 2025), 240 pages, ISBN: 978-0226841557, $45.
In the late eighteenth and early nineteenth centuries, European artists confronted the emergence of a new way of thinking about and treating the Earth and its resources. Centered on extraction, this new paradigm was characterized by large-scale efforts to transform and monetize the physical environment across the globe. With this book, Stephanie O’Rourke considers such practices, looking at what was at stake in visual representations of the natural world during the first decades of Europe’s industrial revolutions. O’Rourke argues that key developments in the European landscape painting tradition were profoundly shaped by industries including mining and timber harvesting, as well as by interlinked ideas about race, climate, and waste. Focusing on developments in Britain, France, Germany, and across Europe’s colonial networks, she explores how artworks and technical illustrations portrayed landscapes in ways that promoted—or pushed against—the logic of resource extraction.
Stephanie O’Rourke is a senior lecturer in art history at the University of St. Andrews, Scotland. She is the author of Art, Science, and the Body in Early Romanticism.
c o n t e n t s
Introduction
1 The French Landscape and the Colonial Forest
2 Mining Romanticism and the Abyss of Time
3 How to Scale a Volcano
4 Human Resources
Conclusion
Acknowledgments
Notes
Bibliography
Index



















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