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Books > Arts & Architecture > Art forms, treatments & subjects > Art treatments & subjects > Individual artists
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.
Andre Kertesz is one of four new titles being published in Autumn
2007 in Thames & Hudson's acclaimed 'Photofile' series. Each
book brings together the best work of the world's greatest
photographers in an attractive format and at an easily affordable
price. Handsome and collectable, the books are printed to the
highest standards. Each one contains some sixty full-page
reproductions printed in superb duotone, together with a critical
introduction and a full bibliography.
Hugely admired by artists and writers from Henri Cartier Bresson to
the Booker prize winner Howard Jacobson, the extraordinary life and
work of painter Dennis Creffield (1931-2018) are explored in this,
the first major monograph on the artist. The narrative traces the
artist's 'Dickensian' upbringing, his formative experiences as a
teenager under the tutelage of David Bomberg, his conversion to
Catholicism and his award-winning years at the Slade. Focus is
given to Creffield's passions for the stories of England, not only
in the Cathedral drawings, but in his expressive work on
Shakespeare's Midsummer Night's Dream, on Blake and in his
paintings and drawings of London, the great Petworth House, Cornish
tin mines and the eerie military buildings on Orford Ness.
Complementing his work on England's sacred and profane identity is
an equally audacious body of work on the human body, from tender
paintings of mother and child to erotic paintings of women to his
late paintings of men near death - Turner, Nelson and Rimbaud. To
quote his fellow artist R.B. Kitaj, Creffield's cover has been
'well and truly blown.'
A highly-illustrated monograph on the life and work of Arthur
Singer, an American wildlife artist specializing in birds. His work
in reference books and U.S. stamps is internationally acclaimed.
Arthur B. Singer was an American wildlife artist specializing in
bird illustration. In a career spanning five decades, he
illustrated more than 20 books, including his masterpiece, Birds of
the World, as well as classic bird guides: Birds of North America,
Birds of Europe, and The Hamlyn Guide to Birds of Britain and
Europe. Singer joined the U.S. Army in 1942 and was assigned to
Company C of the 603rd Camouflage Engineers.As a member of unit,
known as the "Ghost Army," Singer along with other artists, created
camouflage and other forms of deception on the battlefields of
Europe. Upon his return to the U.S., he worked briefly in an
advertising agency and became a full-time illustrator and artist in
1955. During the 1980s, assisted by his son, Alan, Singer's
paintings of state birds were seen by millions when the U.S. Postal
Service issued the State Birds & Flowerspostage stamps. The
stamps became one of the largest selling commemoratives in U.S.
Postal history. He received the Hal Borland Award in 1985 from the
National Audubon Society. His paintings are represented in several
public and private collections in the United States and Europe.
Since his death in 1990, retrospectives of Singer's artwork have
been presented in several museums and art galleries across the U.S.
PAUL SINGER has focused on designs for zoos, museums, and botanic
gardens. He has worked as an interpretive sign designer for the
National Park Service and his illustrations are included inThe
Knopf Nature Guide series for Audubon, The Audubon MasterGuides to
Birding, The Knopf Collector Guides to American Antiques and other
publications. ALAN SINGER is a graduate of The Cooper Union School
of Art and worked with his father, Arthur, on painting revisions to
both of Singer's field guides to birds, and helped illustrate the
State Bird & Flower Stamps for the U.S. Postal Service. Since
1989, he has been a tenured professor at the Rochester Institute of
Technology. A prolific printmaker, painter, andauthor, he has had
27 solo exhibits.
Although Max Liebermann (1847-1935) began his career as a realist
painter depicting scenes of rural labor, Dutch village life, and
the countryside, by the turn of the century, his paintings had
evolved into colorful images of bourgeois life and leisure that
critics associated with French impressionism. During a time of
increasing German nationalism, his paintings and cultural politics
sparked numerous aesthetic and political controversies. His eminent
career and his reputation intersected with the dramatic and violent
events of modern German history from the Empire to the Third Reich.
The Nazis' persecution of modern and Jewish artists led to the
obliteration of Liebermann from the narratives of modern art, but
this volume contributes to the recent wave of scholarly literature
that works to recover his role and his oeuvre from an international
perspective.
Bonjour Mr Inshaw is a homage by the award-winning poet Peter
Robinson to David Inshaw, the celebrated painter, whom he first met
during the artist's years as Creative Arts Fellow at Trinity
College, Cambridge, in the mid-1970s. Largely produced in an
unexpected burst of inspiration after a visit to the painter's
studio early in 2019, these poems combine memories of Inshaw's
paintings, or characteristic landscapes, with experiences of his
company and conversation. Showing a formal flexibility and deftness
characteristic of this poet's work, they reflect on the role of art
in a time of political and cultural division. Presented in an en
face format, Bonjour Mr Inshaw beautifully illustrates its
ekphrastic encounters and allows us to reflect in turn on this
contemporary example of the centuries-old dialogue between the arts
of poetry and painting. `Following the visionary traditions of such
quintessentially English predecessors as Samuel Palmer ... or
Stanley Spencer ... Inshaw's paintings discover the mystical in
what could just as easily be overlooked as the mundane.' - Rachel
Campbell-Johnston, art critic for The Times `Robinson is the finest
poet alive when it comes to the probing of shifts in atmosphere,
momentary changes in the weather of the mind, each poem an
astonishingly fine-tuned gauge for recording the pressures and
processes that generate lived occasions' - Adam Piette in The
Reader
As portrayed in this monograph, sculptor Simeon Nelson's work
examines human attempts to define, order, and classify nature
throughout the ages, questioning how human understanding of the
natural world has evolved in relation to the changing fashions of
scientific and artistic inquiry.
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.
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.
New expanded 248pp 2019 Edition. The single best collection of
photography of Banksy's street work that has ever been assembled
for print. If that isn't enough there are some words too. You Are
An Acceptable Level of Threat covers his entire street art career,
spanning the late '90s right up to the 'Seasons Greetings'
Christmas 2018 piece in Port Talbot, Wales. This new edition
includes his self-destructing 'Love is in the Bin' intervention,
which according to Sotheby's is "the first artwork in history to
have been created live during an auction." The groundbreaking
'Dismaland' show, his Paris '68 revisited works, The Walled Off
Hotel, Brexit, Cans Festival, Brookyln and Basquiat, as well as new
works from Gaza and New York. Also featuring the controversial
'Cheltenham Spies' as well as 'Girl with a Pearl Earring', 'Art
Buff' and the spectacular 'Mobile Lovers' which appeared outside
Bristol Boys Boxing Club. 248 pages featuring his greatest works of
art in context.
A comprehensive introduction to Velazquez's life and art which
includes a discussion of all his major works. Diego Velazquez
(1599-1660) was one of the towering figures of western painting and
Baroque art, a technical master renowned for his focus on realism
and startling veracity. Everything he painted was 'treated' as a
portrait, from Spanish royalty and Pope Innocent X, to a mortar and
pestle. This comprehensive introduction to Velazquez's life and art
includes a discussion of all his major works, and illustrates most
of Velazquez's surviving output of approximately 110 paintings. The
artist's greatest innovation - his unorthodox and revolutionary
technique is explored in relation to the styles of certain of his
most celebrated contemporaries both in Spain and beyond, including
Titian and Rubens. The book concludes with a final chapter on the
influence and importance of Velazquez's art on later painters from
the time of his own death to the art of recent times including
Francisco Goya, Pablo Picasso, Francis Bacon and the
Impressionists.
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Lisa Yuskavage: Wilderness
(Hardcover)
Lisa Yuskavage; Text written by Christopher Bedford, Helen Molesworth, Heidi Zuckerman; Interview by Mary Weatherford
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R1,542
R1,306
Discovery Miles 13 060
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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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R620
R530
Discovery Miles 5 300
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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.
A magisterial study of celebrated photographer Walker Evans Walker
Evans (1903-75) was a great American artist photographing people
and places in the United States in unforgettable ways. He is known
for his work for the Farm Security Administration, addressing the
Great Depression, but what he actually saw was the diversity of
people and the damage of the long Civil War. In Walker Evans,
renowned art historian Svetlana Alpers explores how Evans made his
distinctive photographs. Delving into a lavish selection of Evans's
work, Alpers uncovers rich parallels between his creative approach
and those of numerous literary and cultural figures, locating Evans
within the wide context of a truly international circle. Alpers
demonstrates that Evans's practice relied on his camera choices and
willingness to edit multiple versions of a shot, as well as his
keen eye and his distant straight-on view of visual objects.
Illustrating the vital role of Evans's dual love of text and
images, Alpers places his writings in conversation with his
photographs. She brings his techniques into dialogue with the work
of a global cast of important artists-from Flaubert and Baudelaire
to Elizabeth Bishop and William Faulkner-underscoring how Evans's
travels abroad in such places as France and Cuba, along with his
expansive literary and artistic tastes, informed his
quintessentially American photographic style. A magisterial account
of a great twentieth-century artist, Walker Evans urges us to look
anew at the act of seeing the world-to reconsider how Evans saw his
subjects, how he saw his photographs, and how we can see his images
as if for the first time.
The Life and Times of Moses Jacob Ezekiel: American Sculptor,
Arcadian Knight tells the remarkable story of Moses Ezekiel and his
rise to international fame as an artist in late nineteenth-century
Italy. Sephardic Jew, homosexual, Confederate soldier, Southern
apologist, opponent of slavery, patriot, expatriate, mystic,
Victorian, dandy, good Samaritan, humanist, royalist, romantic,
reactionary, republican, monist, dualist, theosophist, freemason,
champion of religious freedom, proto-Zionist, and proverbial Court
Jew, Moses Ezekiel was a riddle of a man, a puzzle of seemingly
irreconcilable parts. Knighted by three European monarchs, courted
by the rich and famous, Moses Ezekiel lived the life of an
aristocrat with rarely a penny to his name. Making his home in the
capacious ruins of the Baths of Diocletian in Rome, he quickly
distinguished himself as the consummate artist and host, winning
international fame for his work and consorting with many of the
lions and luminaries of the fin-de-siecle world, including Giuseppe
Garibaldi, Queen Margherita, Franz Liszt, Richard Wagner, Sarah
Bernhardt, Gabriele D'Annunzio, Eleonora Duse, Annie Besant, Clara
Schumann, Sir Lawrence Alma-Tadema, Alphonse Daudet, Mark Twain,
Emile Zola, Robert E. Lee, Augustus Saint-Gaudens, and Isaac Mayer
Wise. In a city besieged with eccentrics, he, a Southern Jewish
homosexual sculptor, was outstanding, an enigma to those who knew
him, a man at once stubbornly original and deeply emblematic of his
times. According to Stanley Chyet in his introduction to Ezekiel's
memoirs, "The contemporary European struggle between liberalism and
reaction, between modernity and feudalism, between the democratic
and the hierarchical is rather amply refracted in Ezekiel's account
of his life in Rome." Indeed so many of the contentious cultural,
political, artistic, and scientific struggles of the age converged
in the figure of this adroit and prepossessing Jew.
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Hebru Brantley
(Hardcover)
Hebru Brantley, Pharrell Williams
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R1,307
R1,085
Discovery Miles 10 850
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Straddling the worlds of fine art, street art and hip-hop,
name-dropped on many a rap song, and collected by the likes of
Jay-Z and LeBron James, Hebru is a painter, sculptor and designer.
He first gained attention as a graffiti artist, tagging walls with
colourful depictions of Flyboy a child donning aviator goggles all
over the Windy City. Fast-forward to 2021 and his creations,
profoundly influenced by Disney and Japanese Super-Flat, are now in
museums, as well as in branded goods for A Bathing Ape, Billionaire
Boys Club, Adidas Originals, KITH, Neighborhood and a host of other
sought-after labels. At the heart of Hebru s work is restoring
innocence to the depiction of black youth, often forced into
adulthood before their time in the eyes of the law and popular
media. Upbeat and life-affirming, Brantley s work not only attempts
to normalize images of black children at play, but in his creation
of black superheroes, even suggests an entirely new mythology in a
cultural landscape often devoid of positive examples. This book
will feature the breadth of Hebru s work so far, and is the first
monograph on his work. Set out in two parts, this work will examine
both the fine art and applied art nature of his work, with both his
paintings and his streetwear collaborations receiving pride of
place in the design of the book by prominent graphic designer
Oliver Munday, currently the art director of The Atlantic Monthly.
The Japanese artist Kawanabe Kyosai (1831-1889) was celebrated for
his exciting impromptu performances at calligraphy and painting
parties. Dynamic, playful and provocative, Kyosai delighted his
audience with spontaneous and speedy paintings of demons,
skeletons, deities and Buddhist saints. These were often satirical,
reflecting a time of political and cultural change in Japan. Among
his most charming and inventive works are his brilliant depictions
of animals, which humorously play the roles of protagonists of
modern life. Kyosai's important place in Japanese art is here
explored in depth by Sadamura Koto, a leading authority on the
artist, in this catalogue of the exceptionally rich holdings of the
Israel Goldman Collection.
The talent behind Radiohead's iconic artwork reveals in his own
words and for the first time the creative process that has driven
his career and earned him a cult reputation. A restless and
prolific figure, Stanley Donwood is widely regarded as one of the
most important visual artists of his generation. His influential
work for Radiohead spans many practices and ever-evolving
aesthetics over a 23-year period, from music packaging to
installations to print-making. Here, for the very first time, he
reveals his personal notebooks, photographs, sketches and abandoned
routes to iconic Radiohead artworks. Arranged chronologically,
chapters are each dedicated to a major work - be it an album cover,
promotional piece or a personal project - presented as a
step-by-step working case study, from speculative ideas and
sketches right through to Photoshop experiments and the finished
piece. Accompanying narratives by Donwood explain the inspirations
and stories behind his creative process and what it is like to work
with the band, told with his typical razor-sharp humour and
generosity of spirit. Featuring a treasury of archive material,
this is the first deep dive into Donwood's creative practice and
the artistic freedom afforded to him by working for a major music
act. There Will Be No Quiet is essential reading, and viewing, for
fans of the band and anyone interested in the explosive mix of
artistic accident, musical ingenuity and creative originality.
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