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Books > Arts & Architecture > Art forms, treatments & subjects > Art treatments & subjects > Individual artists > General
This book focuses on Aby Warburg (1866-1929), one of the legendary
figures of twentieth century cultural history. His collection,
which is now housed in the Warburg Institute of the University of
London bears witness to his idiosyncratic approach to a psychology
of symbolism, and explores the Nachleben of classical antiquity in
its manifold cultural legacy. This collection of essays offers the
first translation of one of Warburg's key essays, the Gombrich
lecture, described by Carlo Ginzburg as 'the richest and most
penetrating interpretation of Warburg' and original essays on
Warburg's astrology, his Mnemosyne project and his favourite topic
of festivals. Richard Woodfield is Research Professor in the
Faculty of Art and Design at the Nottingham Trent University,
England. He has edited E.H Gombrich's Reflections on the History of
Art (1987), Gombrich on Art and Psychology (1996), The Essential
Gombrich (1996), and a volume on Riegl in the Critical Voices in
Art, Theory and Culture series. He is also the General Editor of a
new series of books for G+B Arts International, Aesthetics and the
Arts. Edited by Richard Woodfield, Research Professor in the
Faculty of Art and Design at Nottingham Trent University, UK.
This book focuses on Aby Warburg (1866-1929), one of the legendary
figures of twentieth century cultural history. His collection,
which is now housed in the Warburg Institute of the University of
London bears witness to his idiosyncratic approach to a psychology
of symbolism, and explores the Nachleben of classical antiquity in
its manifold cultural legacy. This collection of essays offers the
first translation of one of Warburg's key essays, the Gombrich
lecture, described by Carlo Ginzburg as 'the richest and most
penetrating interpretation of Warburg' and original essays on
Warburg's astrology, his Mnemosyne project and his favourite topic
of festivals. Richard Woodfield is Research Professor in the
Faculty of Art and Design at the Nottingham Trent University,
England. He has edited E.H Gombrich's Reflections on the History of
Art (1987), Gombrich on Art and Psychology (1996), The Essential
Gombrich (1996), and a volume on Riegl in the Critical Voices in
Art, Theory and Culture series. He is also the General Editor of a
new series of books for G+B Arts International, Aesthetics and the
Arts. Edited by Richard Woodfield, Research Professor in the
Faculty of Art and Design at Nottingham Trent University, UK.
Alois Riegl (1858-1905) was one of the founding fathers of modern
formalist criticism. As a member of the Vienna School of Art
Historians, he shared their range of interests in the decorative
arts, art in transition, conservation and monuments. In addition to
offering a structuralist account of the history of art Riegl also
created a formalist approach to the history of ornament, one
unmatched until Gombrich's publication of "The Sense of Order".
These critical essays examine various facets of Riegl's work. They
open with a translation of Hans Sedlmayr's famous, and notorious,
"Die Quintessenze der Lehren Riegls". Included is Julius von
Schlosser's assessment of Riegl's contribution to the Vienna School
of Art Historians as well as essays by a team of international
scholars. The book offers a re-engagement with the ideas of one of
the most important and neglected art historians of the 20th
century.
Alois Riegl (1858-1905) was one of the founding fathers of modern
formalist criticism. As a member of the Vienna School of Art
Historians, he shared their range of interests in the decorative
arts, art in transition, conservation and monuments. In addition to
offering a structuralist account of the history of art Riegl also
created a formalist approach to the history of ornament, one
unmatched until Gombrich's publication of "The Sense of Order".
These critical essays examine various facets of Riegl's work. They
open with a translation of Hans Sedlmayr's famous, and notorious,
"Die Quintessenze der Lehren Riegls". Included is Julius von
Schlosser's assessment of Riegl's contribution to the Vienna School
of Art Historians as well as essays by a team of international
scholars. The book offers a re-engagement with the ideas of one of
the most important and neglected art historians of the 20th
century.
Michael Allred stands out for his blend of spiritual and
philosophical approaches with an art style reminiscent of 1960s era
superhero comics, which creates a mixture of both postmodernism and
nostalgia. His childhood came during an era where pop art and camp
embraced elements of kitsch and pastiche and introduced them into
the lexicon of popular culture. Allred's use of both in his work as
a cartoonist on his signature comic book Madman in the early 1990s
offset the veiled autobiography of his own spiritual journey
through Mormonism and struggles with existentialism. Thematically,
Allred's work deals heavily with the afterlife as his creations
struggle with the grander questions--whether his modern
Frankenstein hero Madman, cosmic rock 'n' roller Red Rocket 7, the
undead heroine of iZombie (co-created with writer Chris Roberson),
or the cast of superhero team book The Atomics. Allred also enjoys
a position in the creator-driven generation that informs the
current batch of independent cartoonists and has experienced his
own brush with a major Hollywood studio's aborted film adaptation
of Madman. Allred's other brushes with Hollywood include an
independent adaptation of his comic book The G-Men from Hell, an
appearance as himself in Kevin Smith's romantic comedy Chasing Amy
(where he provided illustrations for a fictitious comic book), the
television adaptation of iZombie, and an ongoing relationship with
director Robert Rodriguez on a future Madman film. Michael Allred:
Conversations features several interviews with the cartoonist from
the early days of Madman's success through to his current
mainstream work for Marvel Comics. To read them is to not only
witness the ever-changing state of the comic book industry, but
also to document Allred's growth as a creative genius.
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Lalan
(Hardcover)
Veronique Bergen, Catherine Kwai
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R1,787
R1,450
Discovery Miles 14 500
Save R337 (19%)
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Born in Guizhou, Xie Jinglan (nicknamed Lalan ) was a
multidisciplinary artist trained across various art forms,
including painting, music, and dance. Excelling in all such
categories, Lalan united these fields in her artistic practice to
create an oeuvre that epitomized synthesized art. Her lifelong
explorations resulted in an unusual kind of exhibition/performance
named Spectacle, which assimilates dance and music within her
artworks. Her works can be found in important Western and Asian
museums, such as the Centre Pompidou Musee National d Art Moderne,
and Musee d Art Moderne de la Ville de Paris, Shanghai Art Museum,
and others. This book reviews her entire career by selecting her
most representative masterpieces and celebrating her life journey
as the backdrop, between dream and drama. The materials in this
book have been collected by a dedicated research team through a
painstaking process lasting more than two years. Lalan s paintings
are a melting pot of many important features inspired by
traditional Chinese culture on the one hand (including the spirit
of Taoism, the practice of qigong, and the essence of ink
landscapes during the Song Dynasty), and Western abstract painting
on the other.
During his travels in Japan with Henry Adams in the latter part of
the nineteenth century, the doyen of American impressionist
painters, La Farge, wrote with amazing sensitivity his observations
about the whole of Japanese society at the time. John La Farge was
born in New York in 1835 to a wealthy and artistic family of French
descent. He studied art in Paris and then with William Hunt at
Newport, Rhode Island. However, he had a unique and complex mind
capable of immense subtlety. He studied Japanese wash painting and
mastered Mandarin Chinese. He also invented the process later known
as Tiffany Glass.
Contents: Contents Preface Looking Forward, Looking Back: 1985-1999 1.The Critical Debate and Its Origins 2.History: Representation and Misrepresentation - The Case of Abstract Expressionism: Revisionism in the 1970s and early 1980s 3.Revisionism Revisited Anna Chave, T J Clark, Eva Cockroft, David Craven, Michael Fried, Anne Gibson, Clement Greenberg, Serge Guilbaut, Michael Kimmelman, Max Kozloff, Rosalind Krauss, Michael Leja, Jane de Hart Mathews, Fred Orton, Griselda Pollock, Dierdre Robson, David and Cecile Shapiro.
A prolifically creative artistic polymath, American artist Amy
Sillman (b.1955) works in drawing, zines, iPhone videos,
installation, collaboration, teaching and curating, but painting
has remained always at the very heart of her practice. This
comprehensive monograph covers two decades of production, from the
late-1990s to the present. Valerie Smith's text reveals Sillman's
uniquely time-based approach to painting, influenced and inflected
as much by filmmakers and musicians and the processes of her other
chosen disciplines as by strictly art-historical forebears.
Sillman's works perform an intensive cognitive and gestural
interrogation of her chosen materials: discovering, undoing and
reforming trains of painterly thought, often over long periods of
time and across large numbers of linked works. Sillman's painting
emerges as a radically expressive force; a pointedly self-reflexive
practice that reformulates contemporary painting as an
ever-evolving continuum and never simply a finished work.
At the turn of the 20th century, Glasgow was the centre for an
avant-garde movement of art and design innovation in Europe, which
we now refer to as The Glasgow Style. While the "Glasgow Boys"
group of painters has been widely written about, their female
contemporaries have received far less attention. In this work, the
editor redresses this imbalance, bringing together research from 18
scholars on the work of an astonishing number of female artists
from this period.
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Inside
(Paperback)
Edward Thomasson
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R270
Discovery Miles 2 700
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Ships in 10 - 15 working days
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Published by the South London Gallery on the occasion of Edward
Thomasson's residency and exhibition, Inside, 1 March - 13 May
2012. This catalogue contains an essay written by Chris
Fite-Wassilak, a selection of colour stills from Edward Thomasson's
video, Inside, 2012, and images of his black and white graphite
drawings on paper.British artist Edward Thomasson graduated from
the Slade School of Fine Art last year and was awarded the
inaugural South London Gallery and SPACE Graduate Residency which
began in October 2011.
This book, a biography on Francis Bacon, is inspired by the
friendship the author had with Bacon and based on records of the
conversations that took place since 1963. The book forms the first
comprehensive account of the artist's life and his work.
Reviewers of a recent exhibition termed Federico Barocci (ca.
1533-1612), 'the greatest artist you've never heard of'. One of the
first original iconographers of the Counter Reformation, Barocci
was a remarkably inventive religious painter and draftsman, and the
first Italian artist to incorporate extensive color into his
drawings. The purpose of this volume is to offer new insights into
Barocci's work and to accord this artist, the dates of whose career
fall between the traditional Renaissance and Baroque periods, the
critical attention he deserves. Employing a range of methodologies,
the essays include new ideas on Barocci's masterpiece, the
Entombment of Christ; fresh thinking about his use of color in his
drawings and innovative design methods; insights into his approach
to the nude; revelations on a key early patron; a consideration of
the reasons behind some of his most original iconography; an
analysis of his unusual approach to the marketing of his pictures;
an exploration of some little-known aspects of his early
production, such as his reliance on Italian majolica and
contemporary sculpture in developing his compositions; and an
examination of a key Barocci document, the post mortem inventory of
his studio. A translated transcription of the inventory is included
as an appendix.
First published 1990, this volume consists of an introductory essay
by Ian Lowe and a comprehensive catalogue of all Wilfred
Fairclough's prints, some 140, from 1932 to the present (1990). Al
the prints are illustrated in the body of the catalogue for ease of
identification and 48 are also reproduced as large format duotone
illustrations. From the Royal College of Art, Wilfred Fairclough
won the Rome Scholarship in Engraving in 1934 and was elected an
Associate of the Royal Society of Painter-Etchers and Engravers in
the same week. His engravings, inspired by his travels in Italy,
Spain and Germany in the 1930s, were succeeded by etchings of
British subjects and topography, notably of Oxford, until, with a
Leverhulme grant, he returned to Italy in 1961. Increasingly,
thereafter he has found his subjects and his inspiration in Venice,
in concerts, restaurant interiors, and the Carnival, and in
Lucerne, in markets and the human figure. Wilfred Fairclough has
exhibited consistently at the Royal Society of Painter-Etchers and
Engravers and at the Royal Academy (where his most recent Venetian
subject, Venice Carnival. Clowns, sold out in three days). Now aged
83 he is still working. There has been no slackening off in his
productivity nor in the quality of his work since he retired from
teaching at the Kingston College of Art in 1972. The Catalogue is
based on his own meticulous records. It will be an essential source
of information for all who are interested in his work as a
printmaker. Elected an Honorary Member of the Royal Society of
Painter-Etchers and Engravers in 1975, Ian Lowe worked in the
Ashmolean Museum in Oxford from 1962 until 1987. There he was
responsible for the collection of nineteenth- and twentieth-century
British prints. He arranged and catalogued numerous exhibitions
including those devoted to ~F.L. Griggs, R.S. Austin, Robin Tanner,
Alan Gwynne-Jones and Richard Shirley Smith. His association with
Wilfred Fairclough dates from 1974. His introductory essay is both
biographical and an appreciation of Fairclough's achievement as a
printmaker. It is based on their correspondence, lectures, and
meetings as well as on the study of the archives and records of the
last sixty years.
Over the last forty years, renewed interest in the career of Henry
Ossawa Tanner (1859-1937) has vaulted him into expanding scholarly
discourse on American art. Consequently, he has emerged as the most
studied and recognized representative of African American art
during the nineteenth century. In fact, Tanner, in the spirit of
political correctness and racial inclusiveness, has gained a
prominent place in recent textbooks on mainstream American art and
his painting, The Banjo Lesson (1893), has become an iconic symbol
of black creativity. In addition, Tanner achieved national
recognition when the Philadelphia Museum of Art in 1991 and the
Pennsylvania Academy of the Fine Arts in 2012 celebrated him with
major retrospectives. The latter exhibition brought in a record
number of viewers. While Tanner lived a relatively simple life
where his faith and family dictated many of the choices he made
daily, his emergence as a prominent black artist in the late
nineteenth century often thrust him openly into coping with the
social complexities inherent with America's great racial divide. In
order to fully appreciate how he negotiated prevailing prejudices
to find success, this book places him in the context of a uniquely
talented black man experiencing the demands and rewards of
nineteenth-century high art and culture. By careful examination on
multiple levels previously not detailed, this book adds greatly to
existing Tanner scholarship and provides readers with a more
complete, richly deserved portrait of this preeminent American
master.
By uniquely treating Gerhard Richter's entire oeuvre as a single
subject, Darryn Ansted combines research into Richter's first art
career as a socialist realist with study of his subsequent
decisions as a significant contemporary artist. Analysis of
Richter's East German murals, early work, lesser known paintings,
and destroyed and unfinished pieces buttress this major
re-evaluation of Richter's other well known but little understood
paintings. By placing the reader in the artist's studio and
examining not only the paintings but the fraught and surprising
decisions behind their production, Richter's methodology is deftly
revealed here as one of profound yet troubled reflection on the
shifting identity, culture and ideology of his period. This
rethinking of Richter's oeuvre is informed by salient analyses of
influential theorists, ranging from Theodor Adorno to Slavoj Zizek,
as throughout, meticulous visual analysis of Richter's changing
aesthetic strategies shows how he persistently attempts to retrace
the border between an objective reality structured by ideology and
his subjective experience as a contemporary painter in the studio.
Its innovative combination of historical accuracy, philosophical
depth and astute visual analysis will make this an indispensible
guide for both new audiences and established scholars of Richter's
painting.
The intimate memoirs of one of the most acclaimed and controversial
artists of her generation. Here I am, a fucked, crazy,
anorexic-alcoholic-childless, beautiful woman. I never dreamt it
would be like this. 'Frequently affecting...intriguing, almost
incantatory' Telegraph Tracey Emin's Strangeland is her own space,
lying between the Margate of her childhood, the Turkey of her
forefathers and her own, private-public life in present-day London.
Her writings, a combination of memoirs and confessions, are deeply
intimate, yet powerfully engaging. Tracey retains a profoundly
romantic world view, paired with an uncompromising honesty. Her
capacity both to create controversies and to strike chords is
unequalled in British life. A remarkable book - and an original,
beautiful mind. 'As spare and poignant as one of Emin's line
drawings' Marie Claire
In his Illuminated Books, William Blake combined text and imagery
on a single page in a way that had not been done since the Middle
Ages. For Blake, religion and politics, intellect and emotion, mind
and body were both unified and in conflict with each other: his
work is expressive of his personal mythology, and his methods of
conveying it were integral to its meaning. There is no comparison
with reading books such as Jerusalem, America, and Songs of
Innocence and of Experience in Blake's own medium, infused with his
sublime and exhilarating colors. Tiny figures and forms dance among
the lines of the text, flames appear to burn up the page, and dense
passages of Biblical-sounding text are brought to a jarring halt by
startling images of death, destruction, and liberation. Blake's
hope that his books would obtain wide circulation was unfulfilled:
some exist only in unique copies and none was printed in more than
very small numbers. Now, for the first time, the plates from the
William Blake Trust's Collected Edition have been brought together
in a single volume, with transcripts of the texts and an
introduction by the noted scholar David Bindman. Includes:
Jerusalem; Songs of Innocence and of Experience; All Religions are
One; There is No Natural Religion; The Book of Thel; The Marriage
of Heaven and Hell; Visions of the Daughters of Albion; America a
Prophecy; Europe a Prophecy; The Song of Los Milton a Poem; The
Ghost of Abel; On Homers Poetry and] On Virgil; Laocoon; The First
Book of Urizen; The Book of Ahania; The Book of Los.
First Published in 1999. Routledge is an imprint of Taylor &
Francis, an informa company.
First Published in 1999. Routledge is an imprint of Taylor &
Francis, an informa company.
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Paperback
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Discovery Miles 7 510
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