The Artist and Journal of Home Culture

The Artist and Journal of Home Culture, also The Artist, was a monthly art and design journal published in London by Archibald Constable & Co. from 1880 to 1902.[1] From 1881 to 1894 the full title was The Artist and Journal of Home Culture. From 1896 the full title became The Artist: An Illustrated Monthly Record of Arts, Crafts and Industries. An American edition was published in New York by Truslove, Hanson & Comba.

The Artist
Disciplinefine arts, applied arts
LanguageEnglish
Publication details
History18801902
Publisher
Archibald Constable & Co. (English edition);
Truslove, Hanson & Comba (American edition)
FrequencyMonthly
Standard abbreviations
ISO 4Artist
Indexing
ISSN2151-4879
LCCN2010-234721
JSTOR21514879
OCLC no.503359263

Under the editorship of Charles Kains Jackson, 188894, The Artist and Journal of Home Culture contained a notable undercurrent of homoeroticism and had some importance in the homosexual subculture without being so overt as to alienate its mainstream readership.[2][3]

Editors

Editor's name Years
Wallace L. Crowdy[4] 1882–1884
Charles Kains Jackson 1888–1894
Wallace L. Crowdy[4] 1894–1899
gollark: I've seen something like that with a hedgehog.
gollark: A technique which may be efficacious is to give each item a "desirability score" out of, shall I perhaps say, 100, and to compute the quotient of the price divided by said "desirability score", in order to calculate which products will most effectively satiate your desire for gaming.
gollark: It is my belief that one should evaluate the desirability of products based merely on the absolute price at the time of possible purchase, and not, as it were, based on the difference in comparison to commonly held prices of that same good or service.
gollark: Quora must ***die***.
gollark: Just continue being signed up and mark it as spam.

References

  1. Brake, Laurel; Demoor, Marysa (gen. eds.) (2009). "THE ARTIST AND JOURNAL OF HOME CULTURE". Dictionary of Nineteenth-Century Journalism. Ghent: Academia Press. p. 25. ISBN 9038213409.CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
  2. Matt Cook, London and the Culture of Homosexuality, 18851914 (Cambridge University Press, 2003), p. 127.
  3. Laurel Brake, "'Gay Discourse' and The Artist and Journal of Home Culture", in Nineteenth-Century Media and the Construction of Identities, edited by Laurel Brake, Bill Bell and David Finkelstein (Palgrave, 2000), pp. 27194.
  4. "CROWDY, Wallace Lowe". Who's Who. 59: 419. 1907.
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