About This Book
The book surveys how artists depict childhood, grouping paintings into categories such as ideal types, children of the aristocracy, rural and village life, street children, child-angels, and the Christ-child. It analyzes visual motifs and emotional registers—pose, expression, costume, and setting—that convey innocence, social identity, play, and religious symbolism. Representative works and artists are discussed to illustrate stylistic contrasts between formal portraiture and genre scenes. The author combines descriptive commentary with selective historical notes and a proposed classification aimed at highlighting characteristic examples rather than producing a comprehensive catalog. Reproductions and plate references accompany the text to guide readers in appreciating the varied artistic treatments of child-life.
About the Author
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