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Books > Arts & Architecture > Art forms, treatments & subjects > Art treatments & subjects > Individual artists
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Noa Noa
(Paperback)
Paul Gauguin; Edited by Jonathan Griffin
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R278
R240
Discovery Miles 2 400
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Gauguin's great diary from Tahiti almost never saw the light of day
in its original form. The manuscript was sent by the artist from
his island refuge to his friend Charles Morice in Paris, and
published in 1901 with immediate success, under the two names of
Paul Gauguin and Charles Morice. Morice, with Gauguin's permission,
had 'edited' and enlarged it to make it more readable. How much of
the charm and crispness of the manuscript had been lost in the
process was anyone's guess. It was to be 40 years before Gauguin's
original version came to light, and it is published here in a
translation by the poet Jonathan Griffin, together with a detailed
description by the art historian Jean Loize, who re-discovered the
manuscript. Loize shows that Morice had in parts altered Gauguin's
text beyond recognition - a startling discovery that entirely
changed ideas about Gauguin's style and intentions. This genuine
version of Noa-Noa is not only an important document, it is also a
beautiful piece of writing: amusing, acid, wide-eyed, moving.
Gauguin feared that, unedited, it would seem absurdly crude; and no
doubt it would have, to most readers in his day. Today we can
appreciate its sketch form, jerky directness, authentic freshness.
This edition is illustrated with the watercolours, wood-engravings
and drawings that Gauguin assembled for the book.
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Dali's Mustache
(Hardcover)
Salvador Dali, Philippe Halsman
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R293
R258
Discovery Miles 2 580
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With 101 "Life" magazine covers to his credit, Philippe Halsman
(1906-1979) was one of the leading portrait photographers of his
time. In addition to his distinguished career in photojournalism,
Halsman was one of the great pioneers of experimental photography,
motivated by a profound desire to push this youngest of art forms
toward new frontiers by using innovative and unorthodox
photographic techniques.
One of Halsman's favorite subjects was Salvarod Dali, the
glittering and controversial painter and theorist with whom the
photographer shared a unique friendship and extraordinary
professional collaboration that spanned over thirty years. Whenever
Dali imagined a photograph so strange that its production seemed
impossible, Halsman tried to find the solution, and invariably
succeeded.
As Halsman explains in his postface, "Dali's Mustache" is the fruit
of this marriage of the minds. The jointly conceived and seemingly
nonsensical questions and answers reveal the gleeful humor and
assumed cynicism for which Dali is famous, while the marvelous and
inspired images of Dali's mustache brilliantly display Halsman's
consummate skill and extraordinary inventiveness as a photographer.
This combination of wit, absurdity, and the offhandedly profound is
irresistible and has contributed to the enduring fascination
inspired by this unique photographic interview, which has become a
cult classic and valuable collector's item since its original
publication in 1954. The present volume faithfully reproduces the
first edition and will introduce a new generation to the irreverent
humor and imaginative genius of two great artists.
This book investigates Jimmie Durham's community-building process
of making and display in four of his projects in Europe: Something
... Perhaps a Fugue or an Elegy (2005); two Neapolitan nativities
(2016 and ongoing); The Middle Earth (with Maria Thereza Alves,
2018); and God's Poems, God's Children (2017). Andrea Feeser
explores these artworks in the context of ideas about connection
set forth by writers Ann Lauterbach, Franz Rosenzweig, Pamela Sue
Anderson, Vinciane Despret, and Hirokazu Miyazaki, among others.
Feeser argues that the materials in Durham's artworks; the method
of their construction; how Durham writes about his pieces; how they
exist with respect to one another; and how they address viewers,
demonstrate that we can create alongside others a world that
embraces and sustains what has been diminished. The book will be of
interest to scholars working in contemporary art, animal studies,
new materialism research, and eco-criticism.
Walt Kelly (1913-1973) is one of the most respected and innovative
American cartoonists of the twentieth century. His long-running
Pogo newspaper strip has been cited by modern comics artists and
scholars as one of the best ever. Cartoonists Bill Watterson
(Calvin and Hobbes), Jeff Smith (Bone), and Frank Cho (Liberty
Meadows) have all cited Kelly as a major influence on their work.
Alongside Uncle Scrooge's Carl Barks and Krazy Kat's George
Herriman, Kelly is recognized as a genius of "funny animal" comics.
We Go Pogo is the first comprehensive study of Kelly's cartoon art
and his larger career in the comics business. Author Kerry D. Soper
examines all aspects of Kelly's career--from his high school
drawings; his work on such animated Disney movies as Dumbo,
Pinocchio, and Fantasia; and his 1930s editorial cartoons for Life
and the New York Herald Tribune. Soper taps Kelly's extensive
personal and professional correspondence and interviews with family
members, friends, and cartoonists to create a complex portrait of
one of the art form's true geniuses. From Pogo's inception in 1948
until Kelly's death, the artist combined remarkable draftsmanship,
slapstick humor, fierce social satire, and inventive dialogue and
dialects. He used the adventures of his animals--all denizens of
the Okefenokee Swamp--as a means to comment on American and
international politics and cultural mores. The strip lampooned
Senator Joseph McCarthy during the height of McCarthyism, the John
Birch Society during the 1960s, Fidel Castro during the Bay of Pigs
fiasco, and many others. Kerry D. Soper, Orem, Utah, is associate
professor of humanities, classics, and comparative literature at
Brigham Young University. He is the author of Garry Trudeau:
Doonesbury and the Aesthetics of Satire, also published by
University Press of Mississippi.
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Kuniyoshi
(Hardcover)
Matthi Forrer
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R2,935
R2,325
Discovery Miles 23 250
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Best known for his depictions of fierce samurai warriors in battle,
Utagawa Kuniyoshi also produced landscapes, portraits of Kabuki
actors, and images of mythical animals. His dynamic action scenes
and fantastic creatures are recognized today as precursors of manga
and anime. This dazzling volume by Matthi Forrer, one of the
leading experts on ukiyo-e art, traces Kuniyoshi's entire career.
Chapters look at the major aspects of Kuniyoshi's oeuvre; his book
illustrations and portraits of fashionable women; his enormously
popular series featuring actors, warriors, and landscapes; and the
influence of Western art on his career. Meticulous, large-scale
reproductions highlight the work's clear outlines, elegantly muted
palette, and precise details-from electrifying depictions of a
tiger, mid-pounce, and light-hearted interpretations of Chinese
folktales, to the terrifying figures of samurai swordsmen and
romantic winter landscapes. A Japanese-style binding and box
complete this luxurious package that promises an endlessly
absorbing journey into the life of Kuniyoshi during the latter days
of Japan's Edo period.
Antonio Lopez Garcia's Everyday Urban Worlds: A Philosophy of
Painting is the first book to give the famed Spanish artist the
critical attention he deserves. Born in Tomelloso in 1936 and still
living in the Spanish capital today, Antonio Lopez has long
cultivated a reputation for impressive urban scenes-but it is urban
time that is his real subject. Going far beyond mere artist
biography, Benjamin Fraser explores the relevance of multiple
disciplines to an understanding of the painter's large-scale
canvasses. Weaving selected images together with their urban
referents-and without ever straying too far from discussion of the
painter's oeuvre, method and reception by critics-Fraser pulls from
disciplines as varied as philosophy, history, Spanish literature
and film, cultural studies, urban geography, architecture, and city
planning in his analyses. The book begins at ground level with one
of the artist's most recognizable images, the Gran Via, which
captures the urban project that sought to establish Madrid as an
emblem of modernity. Here, discussion of the artist's chosen
painting style-one that has been referred to as a 'hyperrealism'-is
integrated with the central street's history, the capital's famous
literary figures, and its filmic representations, setting up the
philosophical perspective toward which the book gradually develops.
Chapter two rises in altitude to focus on Madrid desde Torres
Blancas, an urban image painted from the vantage point provided by
an iconic high-rise in the north-central area of the city.
Discussion of the Spanish capital's northward expansion complements
a broad view of the artist's push into representations of landscape
and allows for the exploration of themes such as political
conflict, social inequality, and the accelerated cultural change of
an increasingly mobile nation during the 1960s. Chapter three views
Madrid desde la torre de bomberos de Vallecas and signals a turn
toward political philosophy. Here, the size of the artist's image
itself foregrounds questions of scale, which Fraser paints in broad
strokes as he blends discussions of artistry with the turbulent
history of one of Madrid's outlying districts and a continued focus
on urban development and its literary and filmic resonance. Antonio
Lopez Garcia's Everyday Urban Worlds also includes an artist
timeline, a concise introduction and an epilogue centering on the
artist's role in the Spanish film El sol del membrillo. The book's
clear style and comprehensive endnotes make it appropriate for both
general readers and specialists alike.
Employing an interdisciplinary approach, this book breaks new
ground by considering how Robert Motherwell's abstract
expressionist art is indebted to Alfred North Whitehead's highly
original process metaphysics. Motherwell first encountered
Whitehead and his work as a philosophy graduate student at Harvard
University, and he continued to espouse Whitehead's processist
theories as germane to his art throughout his life. This book
examines how Whitehead's process philosophy-inspired by quantum
theory and focusing on the ongoing ingenuity of dynamic forces of
energy rather than traditional views of inert substances-set the
stage for Motherwell's future art. This book will be of interest to
scholars in twentieth-century modern art, philosophy of art and
aesthetics, and art history.
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Yin Xiuzhen
(Paperback)
Hou Hanru, Hung Wu, Stephanie Rosenthal
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R887
R761
Discovery Miles 7 610
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A leading female sculptor and figure in Chinese contemporary art,
Yin Xiuzhen (b. 1963, Beijing, China) began her career in the early
1990s following her graduation from Capital Normal University in
Beijing where she received a B.A. from the Fine Arts Department in
1989. Best known for her works that incorporate second-hand
objects, Yin uses her artwork to explore modern issues of
globalization and homogenization. By utilizing recycled materials
such as sculptural documents of memory, she seeks to personalize
objects and allude to the lives of specific individuals, which are
often neglected in the drive toward excessive urbanization, rapid
modern development and the growing global economy. The artist
explains, "In a rapidly changing China, 'memory' seems to vanish
more quickly than everything else. That's why preserving memory has
become an alternative way of life."
London-based artist Stephen Willats is a pioneer of conceptual art
and has made work examining the function and meaning of art in
society since the late 1950s. His first South London Gallery
exhibition in 1998, entitled Changing Everything, brought together
a body of work made in partnership with local residents over a
two-year period. Aiming to create a cultural model of how art might
relate to society, the work invited visitors to make their own
contributions to it, shifting the way the art institution relates
to the world around it. For his latest SLG show, Surfing with the
Attractor, Willats re-presents material from Changing Everything
alongside a new installation featuring a huge 'data stream'
spanning 15 metres and made in collaboration with 14 London-based
artists. Comprising hundreds of carefully ordered images in various
media, the data stream documents two contrasting streets of London:
Rye Lane in Peckham and Regent Street in the West End.Extending
beyond the gallery space, the show also includes films from the
data stream shown on monitors in shops on Peckham Road and
Camberwell Church Street, and graphic stickers will be widely
distributed.
Raphael (1483-1520) was for centuries considered the greatest
artist who ever lived. Much of what we know about him comes from
this biography, written by the Florentine painter Giorgio Vasari
and first published in 1550. Vasari's Lives of the Painters was the
first attempt to write a systematic history of Italian art. The
Life of Raphael is a key text not only for the appreciation of
Raphael's own art - whose development and chronology Vasari
describes in detail, together with the spectacular social career of
the first painter to be mooted, it was claimed, as a Cardinal - but
also for its unprecedented attention to theoretical issues.
Wolfgang Beltracchi is a phenomenon of the international art world.
His name is inextricably entwined with one of the greatest
upheavals in the global art market. Emulating numerous world-famous
artists, he developed and painted new paintings, continued their
narrations and biography, and concluded them with a forged
signature. His wife Helene Beltracchi then smuggled them onto the
art market. Many experts were deceived by Beltracchi's stupendous
skill and auctioneers cast many doubts aside in the interests of
insatiable market demand, selling the paintings as authentic works
by the purported artists. Reading the artistic handwriting of a
painting requires an exceptional willingness and ability to be able
to empathise and identify with the artist, until you "can feel what
the other feels" (Wolfgang Beltracchi). Through extensive
discussions with the painter and his wife, the psychoanalyst
Jeannette Fischer explored this capability that is so pronounced
for Beltracchi. In her new book, she places this in relation to the
disappearance of Beltracchi's own signature. As with her previous
highly successful book about the performance artist Marina
Abramovic, Jeannette Fischer has created an exceptionally
insightful portrait of a fascinating artist personality.
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This is Magritte
(Hardcover)
Patricia Allmer; Illustrated by Iker Spozio
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R297
R203
Discovery Miles 2 030
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Belgian artist Rene Magritte's biography is a key element of his
art. His life is infused with bizarre moments: a surreal journey
oscillating between fact and fiction that he always conducted as
the straight-faced bowler-hatted man. The events of Magritte's
childhood played an important part in creating the surrealist, but
it was his popular culture borrowings from crime fiction,
advertising and postcards that has made his work instantly
recognizable. The often unreliable nature of Magritte's accounts of
his own life have transformed his public image into a kind of
fictional character rather than a 'real person'. He would shape his
own life story to be its own surreal work of art.
Prolific and successful in his own lifetime, and ""Picture drawer""
to Charles I, Cornelius Johnson (1593-1661) is now the forgotten
man of seventeenth-century British art. This is the first book ever
to address his life and work. Johnson's surviving works, all
portraits, are found in most public collections in Britain and in
many private collections seen on the walls of British country
houses, in the possession of descendants of the original sitters.
Working on every scale from the miniature to the full-length and
big group portrait, Johnson faithfully rendered the rich textiles
and intricate lace collars worn by his sitters. While always
recognisably by him, his works reveal his exceptional flexibility
and underline his response to successive influences. When four of
Johnson's portraits in the Tate's collection were recently
conserved, the author Karen Hearn commissioned investigations into
his working methods and techniques. This previously unpublished
material will make a significant contribution to the literature on
this little-known artist as well as to the technical literature on
17th-century painting. Johnson's career coincided with one of the
most dramatic periods in 17th-century history, and he painted many
of the leading figures of the era. In 1632 he was appointed Charles
I's Picture drawer and, as well as portraying the king, he produced
exquisite small images of the royal children. In 1643, following
the outbreak of Civil War, Johnson emigrated to the northern
Netherlands. There he continued to work successfully, in
Middelburg, Amsterdam, The Hague and, finally, in Utrecht, where he
died a prosperous man. Johnson's portraits are not elaborate
Baroque construts on the contrary, they have a delicacy, a dignity
and a humanity that speak directly to present-day viewers. Their
quality and diversity will be a revelation.
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Rhymes of Early Jungle Folk
(Hardcover)
The Wharton Esherick Museum; Mary E Marcy; Illustrated by Wharton Esherick; Foreword by Laura Heemer
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R572
R495
Discovery Miles 4 950
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This facsimile edition of a 1922 children's book features
seventy-three dynamic and whimsical woodcut illustrations-the first
woodcuts that the famed American craftsman Wharton Esherick
produced. A high-quality replica authorized by the Wharton Esherick
Museum, this book reveals the foundation of Esherick's direction as
an artist. Edited by Museum director Paul Eisenhauer, it also
features a foreword by Museum assistant curator Laura Heemer. The
illustrations frame verses that introduce children to the
principles of evolution, a highly controversial topic at the time:
the book was published three years before the famous Scopes
"Monkey" trial of 1925 that resulted in the inclusion of the
teaching of evolution in public schools. Drawn by the excitement of
the controversy, Esherick threw his passion into these
illustrations. Afterward he would go on to carve over 300 woodcuts,
leading to decorative carving, and ultimately, to Esherick's
realization that he was a sculptor rather than a painter.
"This fine memoir is more insightful than gossipy, and as a subject
Bacon is just about unbeatable." -- The New York Times In June of
1963, when Michael Peppiatt first met Francis Bacon, the former was
a college boy at Cambridge, the latter already a famous painter,
more than thirty years his senior. And yet, Peppiatt was welcomed
into the volatile artist's world; Bacon, considered by many to be
"mad, bad, and dangerous to know," proved himself a devoted friend
and father figure, even amidst the drinking and gambling. Though
Peppiatt would later write perhaps the definitive biography of
Bacon, his sharply drawn memoir has a different vigor, revealing
the artist at his most intimate and indiscreet, and his London and
Paris milieus in all their seediness and splendor. Bacon is felt
with immediacy, as Peppiatt draws from contemporary diaries and
records of their time together, giving us the story of a
friendship, and a new perspective on an artist of enduring
fascination.
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Laura Knight
(Hardcover)
Alice Strickland; Series edited by Katy Norris; Edited by Rebeka Cohen; Designed by Clare Skeats
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R313
Discovery Miles 3 130
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Sigmund Freud was already internationally acclaimed as the
principal founder of psychoanalysis when he turned his attention to
the life of Leonardo da Vinci. It remained Freud's favourite
composition. Compressing many of his insights into a few pages, the
result is a fascinating picture of some of Freud's fundamental
ideas, including human sexuality, dreams, and repression. It is an
equally compelling - and controversial - portrait of Leonardo and
the creative forces that according to Freud lie behind some of his
great works, including the Mona Lisa. With a new foreword by Maria
Walsh.
Born in Yugan, near Jingdezhen, the birthplace of porcelain, Bai
Ming has contributed to the revival of contemporary Chinese
ceramics and introduced it to a new worldwide audience through
numerous exhibitions. Today he is arguably China's greatest
exponent of this most traditional art form. In this book, Bai Ming
traces his career, revealing a sensitive yet creative and
flamboyant style, built on the most rigorous traditional
techniques. Focussing particularly on his blue and white ceramic
work, this book, through a large selection of glorious images and
the artist's own words, reveals Bai Ming's exquisite style and
superb attention to detail.
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