Nicholas Tromans has written widely on nineteenth-century British art, including books on David Wilkie, Orientalist painting, G. F. Watts, Richard Dadd and (with Susan Owens) Christina Rossetti and the visual arts. He lives in London.
"""This is a ground-breaking volume on a subject previously barely touched on, the display of paintings in private homes.""-- ""British Art Journal"" ""Not mere decoration, this entertaining study of art at home reveals the thinking behind what people hang on their walls . . . [a] fascinating exploration of what happens to pictures when they retreat from the public gaze behind the closed doors of private houses. It is a far richer and more complex history than I had realized . . . Hang and be judged: the book may force you to cast a cold eye over your own walls.""-- ""The Art Newspaper"" ""This is a book about picture collections and domestic space in the nineteenth century. . . . A fascinating study [that] takes an engagingly creative approach to that topic, and by no means provides a neat, comprehensive, chronological history from 1800 through to World War II. Instead, it keeps coming at its subject from a variety of angles, some fascinatingly technical, some philosophical.""--Kate Retford, professor of art history, Birkbeck, University of London ""This unusual and ambitious book illuminates an aspect of art history that has been surprisingly neglected. Why did people hang pictures on their walls? How were they hung? Which pictures and in which room? This engaging book makes a significant contribution to our understanding of the public engagement with art in the long nineteenth century.""--Caroline Dakers, professor emerita in cultural history, University of Arts London ""The Private Lives of Pictures explores the challenges, assumptions, and expectations brought to bear on the sudden influx of pictures on private walls. The subject is so rich that it is remarkable it has not been substantially discussed to date . . . a convivial tour through a representative, and predominantly middle-class, parlor, dining room, drawing room, bedroom and nursery (via many corridors and stairs), Tromans suggests that pictures served different functions in different places . . . [the book] offers a provocative new approach to the history of art and interiors.""-- ""Apollo Magazine"" ""With its impressive range of references from the worlds of art, design, literature and popular culture--from Joshua Reynolds to Abigail's Party--The Private Lives of Pictures offers its readers a sustained and eloquent reflection on the complex and key roles played by pictures in late nineteenth-century domestic interiors.""--Penny Sparke, professor of design history, Kingston University London, author of ""The Modern Interior"""