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Books > Arts & Architecture > History of art / art & design styles
This welcome catalogue accompanies The Courtauld's display of the
work of Helen Saunders (1885–1963), the first monographic
exhibition devoted to the artist in over 25 years. After years of
obscurity, Helen Saunders: Modernist Rebel reconsiders her work as
an important part of the story of British modernism. One of the
first British artists to pursue abstraction, Saunders was one of
only two women to join the Vorticists, the radical but short-lived
art movement that emerged in London on the eve of the First World
War. Her extraordinary drawings capture both the dynamism of modern
urban life and the horrors of mechanised warfare. Following the
war, she turned her back on Vorticism and pursued her own path,
working in a more figurative style. Due in part to the loss of a
significant portion of her oeuvre, including all of her Vorticist
oil paintings, this remarkable artist fell into obscurity. Only in
recent years has her work begun to be rediscovered and celebrated
as an important piece of the story of British modernism. A group of
20 drawings gifted in 2016 by her relative, the artist and writer,
Brigid Peppin, has transformed The Courtauld into the largest
public collection of Saunders's work in the world. These drawings
trace Saunders's artistic development in the orbit of Roger Fry and
the Bloomsbury Group, keenly attuned to contemporary art in France,
to the ground-breaking abstraction of Vorticism. Following the
disruption of the First World War and the disbanding of the
Vorticists, Saunders turned again to figuration, developing her own
approach to landscape, portraiture and still life which she would
pursue alone for the rest of her career, exhibiting sporadically
and never again joining a group of artists. This interest is
revealed here in a group of landscapes created in L'Estaque in the
south of France in the 1920s, which show the artist responding both
to her surroundings as well as to predecessors such as Paul
Cézanne and Georges Braque who had previously worked in the area.
Featuring essays by Brigid Peppin and Jo Cottrell on Saunders's
artistic education and career and on her relationship to the places
of Vorticism in London, and catalogue entries by Rachel Sloan, this
volume sheds light on an artist who steadily pursued her own path
and whose contribution to the story of modern art is being newly
appreciated.
The myth of Van Gogh today is linked as much to his extraordinary
life as it is to his stunning paintings. His biography has often
shaped the way that his self-portraits have been (mis)understood.
Van Gogh. Self-Portraits reconsiders this aspect of his production
and places the artist's self-representation in context to reveal
the role it plays in his oeuvre. It also explores the power and
profound emotion of these highly personal paintings. Van Gogh.
Self-Portraits is the first time this theme has been exclusively
addressed. Self-portraits painted during Van Gogh's time in Paris
(February 1886 - February 1888) have been the subject of two
exhibitions (in 1960 at Marlborough Fine Arts in London and in 1995
at the Kunsthalle in Hamburg) but never has the full chronological
range been explored. The exhibition at The Courtauld Gallery, which
this volume accompanies, features paintings from both the Parisian
and Provencal periods. It brings together half of Van Gogh's
thirty-five known self-portraits to examine the ways the artist
approached this particular subject-matter. On a practical level,
painting himself provided Van Gogh with the cheapest and most
patient of models and represented an important conduit for
stylistic experimentation. He also used self-portraiture as an
homage to his illustrious Dutch predecessor Rembrandt, as well as a
way of fashioning his own identity and presenting himself to the
outside world. Of particular interest is the striking way the
evolution of Van Gogh's self-representation over the short years of
his artistic activity can be seen as a microcosm of his development
as a painter. In addition to the world-famous Self-Portrait with
Bandaged Ear in The Courtauld's collection, the exhibition
showcases a group of major masterpieces brought together from
international collections, including the Van Gogh Museum in
Amsterdam, the Muse d'Orsay in Paris, the Art Institute of Chicago
and the National Gallery of Art in Washington, D.C., among others.
This beautifully illustrated catalogue includes detailed entries on
each work, an appendix illustrating all of Van Gogh's
self-portraits and three insightful essays on the theme.
Transforming Type examines kinetic or moving type in a range of
fields including film credits, television idents, interactive
poetry and motion graphics. As the screen increasingly imitates the
properties of real-life environments, typographic sequences are
able to present letters that are active and reactive. These
environments invite new discussions about the difference between
motion and change, global and local transformation, and the
relationship between word and image. In this illuminating study,
Barbara Brownie explores the ways in which letterforms transform on
screen, and the consequences of such transformations. Drawing on
examples including Kyle Cooper's title sequence design, kinetic
poetry and MPC's idents for the UK's Channel 4, she differentiates
motion from other kinds of kineticism, with particular emphasis on
the transformation of letterforms into other forms and objects,
through construction, parallax and metamorphosis. She proposes that
each of these kinetic behaviours requires us to revisit existing
assumptions about the nature of alphabetic forms and the spaces in
which they are found.
From the late 1940s, until shortly before his death in 2007, John
Devitt was one of Dublin's most avid and discerning theatre-goers.
For John, attending the theatre was something more than an evening
out: it was a passion, a commitment, almost a vocation. A born
raconteur, John could talk about productions from the 1950s, 1960s
or 1970s as if he had just stepped out of the theatre, fresh from
the experience that meant so much to him. This book is much more
than a record of the oral history of Dublin theatre-going that his
memories contained - it is a glimpse into a life that was witty,
argumentative, and vigorous, but never dull.
"Medieval renaissance Baroque" celebrates Marilyn Aronberg Lavin's
breakthrough achievements in both the print and digital realms of
art and cultural history. Fifteen friends and colleagues present
tributes and essays that reflect every facet of this renowned
scholar's brilliant career. Tribute presenters include Ellen
Burstyn, Langdon Hammer, Phyllis Lambert, and James Marrow.
Contributors include Kirk Alexander, Horst Bredekamp, Nicola
Courtright, David Freedberg, Jack Freiberg, Marc Fumaroli, David A.
Levine, Daniel T. Michaels, Elizabeth Pilliod, Debra Pincus, and
Gary Schwartz. 79 illustrations, bibliography of Marilyn Lavin's
works, index.
A highly anticipated biography of the enigmatic and popular Swedish
painter. The Swedish painter Hilma af Klint (1862-1944) was 44
years old when she broke with the academic tradition in which she
had been trained. While her naturalistic landscapes and botanicals
were shown during her lifetime, her body of radical, abstract works
never received the same attention. Today, it is widely accepted
that af Klint produced the earliest abstract paintings by a trained
European artist. But this is only part of her story. Not only was
she a successful woman artist, but she was also an avowed
clairvoyant and mystic. Like many of the artists at the turn of the
twentieth century who developed some version of abstract painting,
af Klint studied Theosophy, which holds that science, art, and
religion are all reflections of an underlying life-form that can be
harnessed through meditation, study, and experimentation. Well
before Kandinsky, Mondrian and Malevich declared themselves the
inventors of abstraction, af Klint was working in a
non-representational mode, producing a powerful visual language
that continues to speak to audiences today. The exhibition of her
work in 2018 at the Guggenheim Museum in New York City attracted
more than 600,000 visitors, making it the most-attended show in the
history of the museum/institution. Despite her enormous popularity,
there has not yet been a biography of af Klint-until now. Inspired
by her first encounter with the artist's work in 2008, Julia Voss
set out to learn Swedish and research af Klint's life-not only who
the artist was but what drove and inspired her. The result is a
fascinating biography of an artist who is as great as she is
enigmatic.
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