This book examines the links between the unprecedented visual
inventiveness of the Romantic period in Britain and eighteenth-century
theories of the sublime. Edmund Burke's Philosophical Enquiry into the
Origin of our Ideas of the Sublime and Beautiful (1757), in particular,
is shown to have directly or indirectly challenged visual artists to
explore not just new themes, but also new compositional strategies and
visual media such as panoramas and book illustrations, by arguing that
the sublime was beyond the reach of painting. More significantly, it
began to call into question mimetic representational models, causing
artists to reflect about the presentation of the unpresentable and
drawing attention to the process of artistic production itself, rather
than the finished artwork.