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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.
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.
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Portraits
(Paperback)
Roderick Buchanan; Foreword by Steven Bode
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R295
Discovery Miles 2 950
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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.
Benvenuto Cellini started getting onto trouble at a young age. By
age sixteen, he had already been exiled from his hometown for six
months due to a public assault of another citizen. As a man with
endless talents-sculpting, drafting, writing, music, Cellini
enjoyed dabbling in many different art forms, a career that enabled
him to travel to various major cities. After apprenticing for a
goldsmith, Cellini moved to Rome at age nineteen. There, Pope
Clement praised his work. However, Cellini's relationship with
Clement was the last time he stood in good graces with a Pope.
After insulting Pope Clement's successor, Pope Farnese, Cellini
left Rome to pursue work in France, fearing that he would be
arrested if he stayed. However, his travels did not protect him
from the wrath of Pope Farnese. After being accused of the theft of
precious Vatican items, Cellini was imprisoned. Deciding to take
matters into his own hands, Cellini organizes a prison escape.
Though his feud with Pope Farnese greatly complicated his life,
Cellini relishes making enemies, and finds humor in every situation
he is in. With stories of sexual conquests, murder, escapes,
near-death experiences, and artistic endeavors, Benvenuto Cellini
reveals all the salacious details of his exhilarating life. Though
he exposes many ugly personality traits that he possesses, Cellini
himself does not believe that he has faults, and only admits to
being wrong once in his life. Despite this, Cellini possesses an
influential amount of charisma, which is as evident in his written
work as it was in his life. Autobiography by Benvenuto Cellini
provides a privileged look into the social life of the Italian
Renaissance, and preserves the memory of the incredible artistic
work of Cellini, most of which has been lost to time. Because of
the fascinating and atypical life Cellini led, paired with his
charisma and humor, Autobiography has remained to feel exciting and
relevant to a modern audience, both for entertainment and
educational purposes. Now with an eye-catching cover design and
printed in a readable font, Benvenuto Cellini's Autobiography is
accessible for a contemporary audience, preserving the wit and
grandeur of work, while renovating it to appeal to a modern
audience.
"Revelatory and sublime...Her work remains conceptually open enough
for viewers to draw their own conclusions, insert their own meaning
and feel transported to other glorious worlds." -The New York Times
One of the most inventive artists of the twentieth century, Hilma
af Klint was a pioneer of abstraction. Her first forays into her
imaginative non-objective painting long preceded the work of
Kandinsky and Mondrian and radically mined the fields of science
and religion. Deeply interested in spiritualism and philosophy, af
Klint developed an iconography that explores esoteric concepts in
metaphysics, as demonstrated in Tree of Knowledge. This rarely seen
series of watercolors renders orbital, enigmatic forms, visual
allegories of unification and separateness, darkness and light,
beginning and end, life and death, and spirit and matter. Published
on the occasion of the exhibition Hilma af Klint: Tree of Knowledge
at David Zwirner New York in 2021 and David Zwirner London in 2022,
this catalogue features a text by the art historian Susan Aberth
examining af Klint's spiritual and anthroposophical influences.
With a conversation between the curator Helen Molesworth and the US
Poet Laureate Joy Harjo discussing connections between Tree of
Knowledge and native theories about plant knowledge, the
publication broadens the scope of philosophical interpretations of
af Klint's timeless work. Also included is a newly commissioned
essay by the celebrated af Klint scholar Julia Voss, a contribution
by the artist Suzan Frecon, and a text by art historian Max
Rosenberg that further develops the conversation around why af
Klint's work was not recognized in its time.
The Art of Heikala: Works and Thoughts is the first major
publication by popular Finnish illustrator Heikala. Heikala's
artwork combines traditional watercolor painting and inks with a
fresh, enchanting approach - fans love her charming characters and
scenes that are largely influenced by Finnish and Japanese
cultures. This combined with her in-depth sharing of her processes
and knowledge, has given Heikala a social media following of over
400,000 on Instagram alone; she also has growing audiences on
Tumblr, Facebook and Twitter. This visually appealing and
coffee-table worthy, hardback art book not only includes Heikala's
sketches, works in progress and beautifully presented paintings
that her fans will be familiar with, it also includes
never-before-seen images from along Heikala's creative journey; all
new in-depth tutorials, thought processes and advice on watercolor
painting; detailed how-to product design guides; and how she has
built a successful career as an artist. A valuable book for fans,
budding artists and experienced illustrators alike.
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Schiele
(Hardcover)
Reinhard Steiner
1
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R448
R412
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With his graphic style, figural distortion, and defiance of
conventional standards of beauty, Egon Schiele (1890-1918) was a
pioneer of Austrian Expressionism and one of the most startling
portrait painters of the 20th century. Mentored by Gustav Klimt,
Schiele dabbled in a glittering Art Nouveau style before developing
his own much more gritty and confrontational aesthetic of sharp
lines, lurid shades, and mannered, elongated figures. His prolific
portraits and self-portraits stunned the Viennese establishment
with an unprecedented psychological and sexual intensity, favoring
erotic, exposing, or unsettling poses in which he or his sitters
cower on the floor, languish with legs akimbo, glower at the
viewer, and thrust their genitalia into the foreground. His models
are at times skeletal and sickly, at other times strong and
sensual. Many contemporaries found Schiele's work to be not only
ugly but morally objectionable; in 1912, the artist was briefly
imprisoned for obscenity. Today, his oeuvre is celebrated for its
revolutionary approach to the human figure and for its direct and
particularly fervent, almost furious brand of draftsmanship. This
book presents key Schiele works to introduce his short but urgent
career and his profound contribution to the development of modern
art, which reaches right through to such contemporary talents as
Tracey Emin and Jenny Saville. About the series Born back in 1985,
the Basic Art Series has evolved into the best-selling art book
collection ever published. Each book in TASCHEN's Basic Art series
features: a detailed chronological summary of the life and oeuvre
of the artist, covering his or her cultural and historical
importance a concise biography approximately 100 illustrations with
explanatory captions
The extraordinary life story of the celebrated artist and writer,
as told through four decades of intimate letters to her beloved
mother Barbara Chase-Riboud has led a remarkable life. After
graduating from Yale's School of Design and Architecture, she moved
to Europe and spent decades traveling the world and living at the
center of artistic, literary, and political circles. She became a
renowned artist whose work is now in museum collections around the
world. Later, she also became an award-winning poet and bestselling
novelist. And along the way, she met many luminaries-from Henri
Cartier-Bresson, Salvador Dali, Alexander Calder, James Baldwin,
and Mao Zedong to Toni Morrison, Pierre Cardin, Jacqueline Kennedy
Onassis, and Josephine Baker. I Always Knew is an intimate and
vivid portrait of Chase-Riboud's life as told through the letters
she wrote to her mother, Vivian Mae, between 1957 and 1991. In
candid detail, Chase-Riboud tells her mother about her life in
Europe, her work as an artist, her romances, and her journeys
around the world, from Western and Eastern Europe to the Middle
East, Africa, the Soviet Union, China, and Mongolia. By turns
brilliant and naive, passionate and tender, poignant and funny,
these letters show Chase-Riboud in the process of becoming who she
is and who she might become. But what emerges most of all is the
powerful story of a unique and remarkable relationship between a
talented, ambitious, and courageous daughter and her adored mother.
Classification and qualification seem almost to be the enemy of
artistic endeavour. Yet in The Natural History of Vedovamazzei, the
curator Mirta D'Argenzio has produced an elliptical collation of
the artists' ideas and hopes that offers a remarkable insight into
a rarely defined world, that of Vedovamazzei's creative process.
Simeone and Stella were lovers, from Naples. They were, and are,
artists, painters, sculptors. As a matter of course they sketched
out ideas in drawings and watercolors, produced cartoons for future
projects, dallied with line and colour for experimental concepts.
Some of them didn't work or were put away for another day. These
sketches, sometimes no more than doodles or jokes, were also their
means of communication when one was away, so that at any moment, on
their return, they would find a scrap with an illustration to muse
over pinned to the wall. Mirta D'Argenzio, the art historian and
curator, came across these fleeting memoranda and resolved to make
sense of them, like an Egyptologist deciphering hieroglyphs or an
entomologist ordering the development of the Wing-tailed Cabbage
White. She set about classifying them into an almost scientific
order, from their larval forms through the pupae to the first
spread of wings. She has produced a collection of the sketches in
eight sections that makes up a visual record of the nascent ideas
of Vedova and Mazzei, even in the 21st century cognisant of the
traditions of Leonardo. The result of her work is as if one were
treading the hallowed halls of the Natural History Museum, with its
polished cases of botanical and insect collections, minutely marked
and classified by the scientist's copperplate hand. It is a
dazzlingdisplay.
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Inside
(Paperback)
Edward Thomasson
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R270
Discovery Miles 2 700
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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.
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.
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.
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.
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.
In February 1972 Henry Moore's sculpture studios in the English
countryside at Much Hadham were filled with the preparations for
his retrospective exhibition at Florence. In search of peace and
quiet, he went into a smaller room overlooking the fields where a
local farmer grazed his sheep. The sheep came very close to the
window, attracting his attention, and he began to draw them.
Initially he saw them as nothing more than four-legged balls of
wool, but his vision changed as he explored what they were really
like - the way they moved, the shape of their bodies under the
fleece. They also developed strong human and biblical associations,
and the sight of a ewe with her lamb evoked the mother-and-child
theme - a large form sheltering a small one - which has been
important to Henry Moore in all his work. He drew the sheep again
that summer after they were shorn, when he could see the shapes of
the bodies which had been covered by wool. Solid in form, sudden
and vigorous in movement, Henry Moore's sheep are created through a
network of swirling and zigzagging lines in the rapid and (in
Moore's hands) sensitive medium of ballpoint pen. The effect is
both familiar and monumental; as Lor
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Richard Jackson
(Hardcover)
Richard Jackson; Text written by John Welchman, Dagny Corcoran
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R1,235
Discovery Miles 12 350
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By turns hilarious, satirical, and brilliant, David Shrigley's
full-page illustrations a combination of drawing, comics,
photography, and sculpture are sui generis: uproariously funny,
pleasantly unnerving, and, most of all, really, really cool.
Neither "graphic novel" nor "art book," What the Hell Are You
Doing? celebrates the surreal world of the artist who created Ants
Have Sex in Your Beer and To Make the Meringue You Must Beat the
Egg Whites Until They Look Like This the man Dave Eggers calls
"probably the funniest gallery-type artist who ever lived."
The collection of essays presented in this volume represents some
of the best recent critical work on William Blake as poet, prophet,
visual artist, and social and political critic of his time. The
critical range that is represented includes examples of Marxist,
New Historicist, Feminist and Psychoanalytical approaches to Blake.
Taken together, the essays consider all areas and moments of
Blake's career as poet, from the early lyrics to his later epic
poems, and they have been chosen to reveal not only the range of
Blake's concerns but also to alert the reader to the rich variety
of contemporary criticism that is devoted to him. Although the
majority of essays are devoted to Blake as poet, others consider
his work as printmaker, illustrator, and visionary artist. However
severely individual essays choose to judge him, ultimately all the
contributions to this book affirm Blake as one of the great
geniuses of English art and letters. William Blake provides a
valuable introduction by one of Britain's foremost critics and will
be welcomed by students wanting to familiarise themselves with the
work of Blake.
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Hardcover
(1)
R336
Discovery Miles 3 360
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