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Books > Arts & Architecture > Art forms, treatments & subjects > Painting & paintings > General
Originally a film by British avant-garde filmmaker Nichola Bruce,
The Romance of Bricks is a portrait of the artist Liz Finch: a
British painter, performer and poet. From her life-changing
accident and rural solitude to the mad social whirl of 80s London
anarchic performances and up to the present day, The Romance of
Bricks sews together archival film over many years to produce an
intriguing glimpse into the private world of the artist. Featuring
commentary from Jools Holland, Christine Binnie, Jennifer Binnie,
John Finch, Brian Clarke, Aubrey Fabing, Richard Strange, Nicola
Bateman Bowery, Francesco Brusatin and Martin Harrison alongside an
intimate dialogue with the artist herself.
Eileen Cooper OBE RA has been consistently successful across her
50-year career, the influence of her art seen in the range and
depth of her work as well as in her contribution to art education.
Cooper's artistic experiences - which, in the words of Linsey
Young, disrupt the neat patriarchal understandings of women - are
brought together in this thoughtfully designed and elegant
hardback. Early works are illustrated alongside previously unseen
drawings, paintings, prints, ceramics and portraits, many of which
will surprise readers. The authors also consider Cooper's work in
relation to the collections of Leicester Museum & Art Gallery,
including works by Peter Doig, Paula Rego, Pablo Picasso, Dame
Laura Knight and Lotte Laserstein.
A FLAME TREE NOTEBOOK. Beautiful and luxurious the journals combine
high-quality production with magnificent art. Perfect as a gift,
and an essential personal choice for writers, notetakers,
travellers, students, poets and diarists. Features a wide range of
well-known and modern artists, with new artworks published
throughout the year. BEAUTIFULLY DESIGNED. The highly crafted
covers are printed on foil paper, embossed then foil stamped,
complemented by the luxury binding and rose red end-papers. The
covers are created by our artists and designers who spend many
hours transforming original artwork into gorgeous 3d masterpieces
that feel good in the hand, and look wonderful on a desk or table.
PRACTICAL, EASY TO USE. Flame Tree Notebooks come with practical
features too: a pocket at the back for scraps and receipts; two
ribbon markers to help keep track of more than just a to-do list;
robust ivory text paper, printed with lines; and when you need to
collect other notes or scraps of paper the magnetic side flap keeps
everything neat and tidy. THE ARTIST. Sandro Botticelli, was one of
the most esteemed artists of the Florentine Renaissance. His Birth
of the Venus depicts the goddess Venus arriving at the shore after
her birth, when she had emerged from the sea fully-grown. The
painting is in the Uffizi Gallery in Florence, Italy. THE FINAL
WORD. As William Morris said, "Have nothing in your houses that you
do not know to be useful, or believe to be beautiful."
Sketchbook Secrets takes the reader into the heart of Moira
Huntly's art, showing how she captures images and occasions in her
sketchbook, and how she then takes those ideas through to finished
paintings. This is a unique opportunity to see the progression of a
painting, from field sketch to finished artwork. Throughout the
book Moira provides useful insights and tips, showing how artists
can make the most creative use of sketches and sketchbooks. Many of
the sketches were made on location all over the world; Moira
demonstrates the essentials of field sketching and shows how she
develops an idea from these sketches. The book is also peppered
with delightful anecdotes as Moira tells the stories behind the
sketches. Sketchbook Secrets is a book to look at and learn from,
and its beautiful pictures will bring readers back time and time
again.
The walls of medieval churches were brightly painted with religious
imagery and colourful patterns, and although often shadows of their
former selves, these paintings are among the most enigmatic art to
survive the Middle Ages. This beautifully illustrated book is an
ideal introduction to this fascinating subject. It tells the
stories behind the paintings and explains their purpose, the
subjects they showed, how they were made and by whom, and what
happened to these works of art during and after the enormous
upheavals of the Reformation. It also compares and contrasts
religious and domestic wall paintings and explores modern
approaches to their conservation and care. A comprehensive
gazetteer provides an invaluable guide to where the best British
examples can be seen. Roger Rosewell is a Fellow of the Society of
Antiquaries and a leading expert on medieval wall paintings. He is
also the Features Editor of Vidimus, the online magazine about
medieval stained glass and a professional lecturer and
photographer. Educated at St Edmund Hall, Oxford University, he has
also written Stained Glass and The Medieval Monastery for Shire.
Be enchanted by the power and beauty of the natural world with this
stunning colouring book, filled with 46 intricate illustrations by
ink artist Stratten Peterson. From the courageous bear, a symbol of
strength and healing, to the inquisitive deer, a manifestation of
inner wisdom, discover how animals have long inspired spirituality,
mythology and one's connection with nature. Through insightful
text, this book invites you to explore the significance of each
mystic animal, then immerse yourself in the extraordinary artworks
as you bring them to life with colour. Mystic Animals is brought to
you by the publisher of the bestselling Kerby Rosanes colouring
book series.
Pop artist, painter of modern life, landscape painter, master of
color, explorer of image and perception-for six decades, David
Hockney has been known as an artist who always finds new ways of
exploring the world and its representational possibilities. He has
consistently created unforgettable images: works with graphic lines
and integrated text in the Swinging Sixties in London; the famous
swimming pool series as a representation of the 1970s California
lifestyle; closely observed portraits and brightly colored,
oversized landscapes after his eventual return to his native
Yorkshire. In addition to drawings in which he transfers what he
sees directly onto paper, there are multiperspective Polaroid
collages that open up the space into a myriad of detailed views,
and iPad drawings in which he captures light using a most modern
medium-testaments to Hockney's enduring delight in experimentation.
This special edition has been newly assembled from the two volumes
of the David Hockney: A Bigger Book monograph to celebrate
TASCHEN's 40th anniversary. Hockney's life and work is presented
year by year as a dialogue between his works and voices from the
time period, alongside reviews and reflections by the artist in a
chronological text, supplemented by portrait photographs and
exhibition views. Together they open up new perspectives, page
after page, revealing how Hockney undertakes his artistic research,
how his painting develops, and where he finds inspiration for his
multifaceted work. About the series TASCHEN is 40! Since we started
our work as cultural archaeologists in 1980, TASCHEN has become
synonymous with accessible publishing, helping bookworms around the
world curate their own library of art, anthropology, and aphrodisia
at an unbeatable price. Today we celebrate 40 years of incredible
books by staying true to our company credo. The 40 series presents
new editions of some of the stars of our program-now more compact,
friendly in price, and still realized with the same commitment to
impeccable production.
Sold in packs of 6. Gorgeous, foiled, handmade greeting cards,
blank inside and shrink-wrapped with a gold envelope. Themed with
our art calendars, foiled notebooks and illustrated art books. Our
greeting cards are printed on FSC paper and wrapped in
biodegradable cellobag, and are themed with our art calendars,
foiled notebooks and illustrated art books. Lucy Innes Williams is
a painter and illustrator with an artistic interest in highly
ornate textiles, patterns, and the decorative arts of the early-mid
twentieth century. She uses a combination of gouache, watercolour
and printmaking.
When and why did large-scale exhibitions of Old Master paintings
begin, and how have they evolved through the centuries? In this
book an eminent art historian examines the intriguing history and
significance of these international art exhibitions. Francis
Haskell begins by discussing the first 'Old Master' exhibitions in
Rome and Florence in the seventeenth century and then moves to
eighteenth-century France and the efforts to organize exhibitions
of contemporary art that would be an alternative to the official
ones held by the Salon. He next describes the role of the British
Institution in London and the series of remarkable loan exhibitions
of Old Master paintings there. He traces the emergence of such
nationalist exhibitions as the Rembrandt exhibition held in
Amsterdam in 1898 - the first modern 'blockbuster' show.
Demonstrating how the international loan exhibition was a vehicle
of foreign and cultural policy after the First World War, he gives
a fascinating account of several of these, notably the Italian art
exhibition held at Burlington House in London in 1930. He describes
the initial reluctance of major museums to send pictures on
potentially damaging journeys and explains how this feeling gave
way to cautious enthusiasm. Finally, in a polemical chapter, he
explores the types of publication associated with exhibitions and
the criticism and scholarship that have centred upon them. Francis
Haskell, who died in January 2000, was one of the most original and
influential art historians of the twentieth century. His books
included 'Patrons and Painters: A Study in the Relations between
Italian Art and Society in the Age of the Baroque' (revised
edition, 1980), 'Past and Present in Art and Taste' (1987),
'History and Its Images: Art and the Interpretation of the Past'
(1993) and, with Nicholas Penny, 'Taste and the Antique' (1982),
all published by Yale University Press. He retired as Professor of
the History of Art at Oxford University in 1995.
A Kenyan upbringing is the ticket to this voyage into a remarkably
real created world entered via carved, integrating frames. Twice
TVs pick of the show at the Royal Academies and with crowds and fan
mail at a third RA Summer Exhibition, James remains a virtual
unknown in his own country. A production rate averaging just one
painting a year may account for this, but in an Art World where
price is all, his output is sufficient to net him a viable living
selling internationally. Also introducing the remarkable paintings
of his artist son Alexander James. Together their art is akin to a
vigorous breath of fresh air in a stuffy room.
Creative genius, war artist, adventurer, lover. These are just some
of the words that can be used to describe Aberdeenshire-born
painter and printmaker James McBey (1883-1959). McBey was a
Scottish superstar amongst the creative spirits that fuelled the
Etching Revival of the late nineteenth century and Etching Boom of
the early twentieth century, and in an historical context, was the
acknowledged heir to Whistler and Rembrandt. But after his death in
Tangier, Morocco, in 1959, his renown as one of Britain's most
accomplished artists - who took the art world by storm - faded from
public consciousness. Born illegitimately in the tiny parish of
Foveran, Aberdeenshire, in the late Victorian era, he was brought
up by his blind mother and elderly grandmother amid the rigid
Presbyterian confines of Scotland's north-east. Tragedy, dreary
work as a bank clerk and a craving for success on his own terms all
precipitated his leaving Aberdeen to live the life of an artist in
London where he quickly became one of the most-talked about
creatives of his generation. At the heart of this biography - the
first ever to be published on McBey - is his time as a war artist
in the Middle East during the Great War - where he would meet and
paint T. E. Lawrence - his many love affairs, marriage to the
beautiful American, Marguerite Loeb, and his enduring passion for
Morocco. Drawing on his many diaries and letters and artistic
creations, this is the story of one man who - clever, kind,
intrepid, dashing, insecure and flawed - triumphed against the
odds.
Presents guidelines and step-by-step projects for decorating
ordinary household items and features. The text introduces the
materials and equipment needed and covers the basic techniques,
from preparing surfaces and cutting a stencil to protecting the
finished work with varnish. The main part of the book takes
elements of the home in turn: walls and floors; furniture;
accessories and fabrics; and outdoor spaces. Also included are
ideas for borders and alternative applications for each motif,
together with a section on materials and techniques.
"A considerable work of assimilative scholarship and common sense...races along merrily."—The Boston Globe.
A common lament among artists is that there are no books available
that give specific, practical information about the procedures used
by those creative geniuses collectively known as the Old Masters.
The reason for this dearth is that such a work's author would have
to possess extraordinarily wide-ranging expert knowledge and
skills. Thomas Gullick's credentials indicate a great capability in
taking up this challenge. He was a professional artist and scholar
living in the mid-19th century, and so was in an exemplary position
to discuss the intricacies of traditional techniques, and to
compare modern systems to the styles and methods of previous eras.
The book's exceptionally insightful combination of art history,
aesthetic theory and erudite analysis made it highly regarded at
the time, and it was given as a prize for outstanding achievement
at the Royal College of Art in London. In this important new
edition, with a newly compiled comprehensive index, Gullick
authoritatively covers the aims and objectives the artist should
have when interpreting reality, with stress laid on accuracy of
detail, depth and transparency. Apropos of these principles, he
skilfully discusses the surprisingly complex theories of art that
existed in ancient times, including that of the Egyptians,
Assyrians, Greeks, Etruscans, and Romans. Also, the spiritual
features of Christian Medieval art are explored, as are the
distinctive traits of the national schools of Italy, Germany, the
Low Countries, and England. Of particular value to the working
artist are the detailed sections dealing with technical issues of
pre-modern forms of painting, many of which are poorly understood
today, but that could, if used, greatly facilitate and expand the
range of visual expression. The reader will learn about various
physical processes such as encaustic, mosaic, tempera, fresco, oil
and miniature painting. There is also a wealth of knowledge
pertaining to implements, vehicles, varnishes, grounds, colours,
subjectiles (i.e. supports), chemical formulations, the arrangement
of the work-room and studio, and much more. Despite the
sophisticated nature of the material, the author does not neglect
the human dimension, for he cites pertinent facts, as well as witty
anecdotes, from the life stories of many well-known and not so
well-known artists.
Born in Mexico in 1907, Frida Kahlo learned about suffering at an
early age. She fell victim to polio at the age of six, and was then
seriously hurt in a bus accident at eighteen, resulting in injuries
that affected her for the rest of her life. The young and
indomitable Frida met Diego Rivera, the great mural painter, when
Mexico was at a great cultural and political crossroads. They
formed a legendary partnership, with a strong attachment to Mexican
folk art, a deep commitment to the Communist struggle and a raging
artistic ambition that survived all the trials of their marriage.
Admired by the Surrealists and photographed by the greatest, Frida
was most renowned for her self-portraits and unusual still lifes.
This book traces the extraordinary life of this artist whose
unforgettable imagery combined cruelty and wit, honesty and
insolence, pain and empowerment.
Keep the page in your book with this gorgeous pack of 10 foiled
bookmarks, printed on both sides, with a silky ribbon and featuring
artwork by Vincent van Gogh. Van Gogh painted a series of pictures
depicting sunflowers, having first been inspired by the yellow
flowers in Paris when he saw them growing in the gardens of
Montmartre. Sunflowers were symbolic of life and hope to the
artist, and could also be associated with his concept of the sun -
glowing, yellow and hopeful.
Keep the page in your book with this gorgeous pack of 10 foiled
bookmarks, printed on both sides, with a silky ribbon and featuring
artwork by Vincent van Gogh. In this painting the brightly lit cafe
radiates with warmth and inviting light, becoming a beacon of
yellow set against the rich, dark blue of a night sky, which in
turn is illuminated by myriad bright stars. Van Gogh attached the
colour yellow to feelings of religious inspiration, light and
happiness.
More than 30 years after his groundbreaking exhibition at London's
Institute of Contemporary Arts, Conrad Atkinson is rightly regarded
as one of Britain's most important living political artists.
Landscapes, the first of a complete series on Atkinson's oeuvre,
reviews work relating specifically to the land, and is published in
response to the inclusion of Atkinson's early masterwork, "For
Wordsworth, For West Cumbria," in the Tate Gallery's recent
exhibition, A Picture of Britain, where the work was given central
placement. The book includes an essay by Richard Cork, chief art
critic of the London Times, an interview with Antony Hudek of the
Courtauld Institute, and original writings by the artist.
Represented in New York by the Ronald Feldman Gallery, Atkinson is
also a Professor of Art at the University of California at Davis.
The relevance of painting has been questioned many times over the
last century, by the arrival of photography, installation art and
digital technologies. But rather than accept the death of painting,
Mark Titmarsh traces a paradoxical interface between this art form
and its opposing forces to define a new practice known as 'expanded
painting' giving the term historical context, theoretical structure
and an important place in contemporary practice. As the formal
boundaries tumble, the being of painting expands to become a kind
of total art incorporating all other media including sculpture,
video and performance. Painting is considered from three different
perspectives: ethnology, art theory and ontology. From an
ethnological point of view, painting is one of any number of
activities that takes place within a culture. In art theory terms,
painting is understood to produce objects of interest for
humanities disciplines. Yet painting as a medium often challenges
both its object and image status, 'expanding' and creating hybrid
works between painting, objects, screen media and text.
Ontologically, painting is understood as an object of aesthetic
discourse that in turn reflects historical states of being. Thus,
Expanded Painting delivers a new kind of saying, a post-aesthetic
discourse that is attuned to an uncanny tension between the
presence and absence of painting.
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