Figures of Several Centuries by Arthur Symons
Arthur Symons’ Figures of Several Centuries is a collection of literary and artistic portraits, not a novel with a single plot. Think of it as a series of vivid, intimate snapshots. Symons, a key figure in the Symbolist movement himself, introduces us to the giants and the misunderstood geniuses of the 1800s. He writes about French poets like Baudelaire and Verlaine, English artists like the Pre-Raphaelites, and playwrights like Ibsen, capturing their personalities, their struggles, and the explosive impact of their work.
Why You Should Read It
This book feels like listening to brilliant gossip from a incredibly well-connected friend. Symons writes with the urgency of someone who knew these ideas were changing the world. He doesn’t just analyze their art; he shows you the person behind it—the flaws, the obsessions, the spark of madness that fueled their creativity. You get a real sense of why a painting or poem caused such an uproar. It makes the whole ‘art for art’s sake’ movement feel immediate and thrilling, not like something locked in a museum.
Final Verdict
Perfect for anyone curious about where modern art and literature came from, but who finds standard art history a bit stuffy. If you enjoy personality-driven biographies, love the drama of the Victorian and fin-de-siècle eras, or just want to understand the wild characters who broke all the rules, you’ll find this fascinating. It’s a book for readers, not just scholars.
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Kenneth Flores
1 year agoA bit long but worth it.