An Exact Likeness: The Portraits of John Wesley
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An Exact Likeness: The Portraits of John Wesley  -     By: Richard P. Heitzenrater

An Exact Likeness: The Portraits of John Wesley

Abingdon Press / 2016 / Paperback

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Product Description

Can a portrait offer a glimpse into a person's soul? The general editor of the works of John Wesley examines the likenesses made of the great 18th-century evangelical: Oxford don, Methodist preacher, and notable person. What did each painter hope to convey and how did Wesley and the public respond?

Product Information

Title: An Exact Likeness: The Portraits of John Wesley
By: Richard P. Heitzenrater
Format: Paperback
Vendor: Abingdon Press
Publication Date: 2016
Weight: 1 pound 2 ounces
ISBN: 1501816608
ISBN-13: 9781501816604
Stock No: WW816605

Publisher's Description

Faces are more than a montage of organs that see, breathe, speak, hear, eat, sing, smell, and yell. As Josephine Tey points out in her mystery novel, The Daughter of Time, the slant of an eyebrow, the set of a mouth, the look of the eye, the firmness of a chin, often can provide evidence of character that is as telling as a report card or a police blotter. Those features depicted on portraits of individuals can be equally telling of the person’s inner nature or perhaps of what the artist thinks (or wants the viewer to think) about the person being portrayed. Sometimes a portrait might be even more useful than a biography.

While examining these portraits, the author considers three questions: what was Wesley’s attitude toward the portrait (if any), how did the public respond to these portrayals, and what was the artist attempting to convey? This book focuses on the main portraits and their derivatives, looking at them within the three main categories that developed over the years: Oxford don, Methodist preacher, and notable person. Although these types seemed to arise in chronological order, there is some overlap between categories, especially toward the end of Wesley’s life and beyond.

Author Bio

Richard P. Heitzenrater is William Kellon Quick Professor Emeritus of Church History and Wesley Studies at The Divinity School, Duke University, Durham, North Carolina; and General Editor of the Bicentennial Edition of the Works of John Wesley. He is also a member of the board of Kingswood Books. He lives in Durham, North Carolina.

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