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Books > Arts & Architecture > Art forms, treatments & subjects > Art treatments & subjects > Individual artists
The Art of Dave Seeley brings together the acclaimed fantasy
artist's finest book cover work in one deluxe volume. Seeley works
in a digital format and uses photo collages to begin each piece.
Blending in specially photographed models and other elements,
Seeley seamlessly forges these disparate pieces together, creating
imagery of unparalleled imagination, scope, and beauty.
Join Chris Ayers and his menagerie as they make their Parisian
debut on the walls of Galerie Daniel Maghen. Fifty-eight pieces
were created especially for the gallery show in year six of The
Daily Zoo and they are all captured in this book in their full
glory. Do not miss meeting Le Chic Sheep, Le Penseur (The Thinker),
Alien Accountant and Rosie On Skates, to name only a few, as they
are certain to become close cartoon friends.
The Ashmolean Museum and the Albertina are collaborating on a
two-part exhibition project that will examine anew the role and the
significance of drawing in Raphael's career. The Ashmolean holds
the greatest collection of Raphael drawings in the world, and the
Albertina is the custodian of a major collection including some of
the most beautiful and important of the artist's sketches. Taken
together, the two collections provide extraordinary resources that,
amplified by carefully-selected international loans, will allow us
to transform our understanding of the art of Raphael. The Oxford
exhibition is based on new research by Dr Catherine Whistler of the
Ashmolean Museum and Dr Ben Thomas from the University of Kent, in
collaboration with Dr Achim Gnann of the Albertina. It will take
Raphael's art of drawing as its focus, with the concept of
eloquence as its underlying structure. Oratory runs as a linking
thread in Raphael's drawings, which stand out for the importance
given to the study of gestures, facial expressions, and
drapery.Moreover, Raphael treated the expressive figure of the
orator - poet, philosopher, muse, apostle, saint or sibyl - in
fascinating and significant ways throughout his life. This
selection of drawings demonstrates how Raphael created a specific
mode of visual invention and persuasive communication through
drawing. He used drawing both as conceptual art (including
brainstorming sheets) and as a practice based on attentive
observation (such as drawing from the posed model). Yet Raphael's
drawings also reveal how the process of drawing in itself, with its
gestural rhythms and spontaneity, can be a form of thought,
generating new ideas. The Oxford exhibition will present drawings
that span Raphael's entire career, encompassing many of his major
projects and exploring his visual language from inventive ideas to
full compositions. The extraordinary range of drawings by Raphael
in the Ashmolean and the Albertina, enhanced by appropriate loans,
will enable this exhibition to cast new light on this familiar
artist, transforming our understanding of Raphael's art.
Sung closely examines William Blake's extant engraved copper plates
and arrives at a new interpretation of his working process. Sung
suggests that Blake revised and corrected his work more than was
previously thought. This belies the Romantic ideal that the acts of
conception and execution are simultaneous in the creative process.
In A Surrealist Stratigraphy of Dorothea Tanning's Chasm, Catriona
McAra offers the first critical study of the literary work of the
celebrated American painter and sculptor Dorothea Tanning
(1910-2012). McAra fills a major gap in the scholarship,
repositioning Tanning's writing at the centre of her entire
creative oeuvre and focusing on a little-known short story "Abyss,"
a gothic-flavoured, desert adventure which Tanning worked on
intermittently throughout her creative life, finally publishing it
in 2004 as Chasm: A Weekend. McAra performs a major reassessment of
the visual and literary principles upon which the surrealist
movement was initially founded. Combining a groundbreaking
methodological approach with reference to cultural theory and
feminist aesthetics as well as Tanning's unpublished journals and
notes, McAra reveals Tanning as a key player in contemporary art
practice as well as in the historical surrealist milieu.
The reception of Thomas Gainsborough's Blue Boy from its origins to
its appearances in contemporary visual culture reveals how its
popularity was achieved and maintained by diverse audiences and in
varied venues. Performative manifestations resulted in
contradictory characterizations of the painted youth as an
aristocrat or a "regular fellow," as masculine or feminine, or as
heterosexual or gay. In private and public spaces where viewers saw
the actual painting and where living and rendered replicas
circulated, Gainsborough's painting was often the centerpiece where
dominant and subordinate classes met, gender identities were
enacted, and sexuality was implicitly or overtly expressed.
Winslow Homer was the antithesis of the unkempt bohemian artist of
the nineteenth century. Yet he is ranked as one of America's
greatest painters. The reason is not hard to discover, for Winslow
Homer's powerful epic statements spoke for America with a breadth
that few other artists have achieved. This is a lively, intimate,
and immensely readable portrait of the artist that throws a new
light on Homer's life and puts it in fresh perspective,
concentrating on Homer's years at Prout's Neck on Maine's rugged
coast, where he would create his finest paintings, from 1883 until
his death in 1920.
Consuelo Jimenez Underwood's artwork is marked by her compassionate
and urgent engagement with a range of pressing contemporary issues,
from immigration and environmental precarity to the resilience of
Indigenous ancestral values and the necessity of decolonial
aesthetics in art making. Drawing on the fiber arts movement of the
1960s and 1970s, Chicana feminist art, and Indigenous fiber- and
loom-based traditions, Jimenez Underwood's art encompasses
needlework, weaving, painted and silkscreened pieces,
installations, sculptures, and performance. This volume's
contributors write about her place in feminist textile art history,
situate her work among that of other Indigenous-identified feminist
artists, and explore her signature works, series, techniques,
images, and materials. Redefining the practice of weaving, Jimenez
Underwood works with repurposed barbed wire, yellow caution tape,
safety pins, and plastic bags and crosses Indigenous, Chicana,
European, and Euro-American art practices, pushing the arts of the
Americas beyond Eurocentric aesthetics toward culturally hybrid and
Indigenous understandings of art making. Jimenez Underwood's
redefinition of weaving and painting alongside the socially and
environmentally engaged dimensions of her work position her as one
of the most vital artists of our time. Contributors. Constance
Cortez, Karen Mary Davalos, Carmen Febles, Maria Esther Fernandez,
Christine Laffer, Ann Marie Leimer, Amalia Mesa-Bains, Robert
Milnes, Jenell Navarro, Laura E. Perez, Marcos Pizarro, Veronica
Reyes, Clara Roman-Odio, Carol Sauvion, Cristina Serna, Emily
Zaiden
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Ounce
(Hardcover)
Herve Martijn
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R1,065
Discovery Miles 10 650
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Ships in 12 - 19 working days
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"Mary Reid Kelley" celebrates the first museum exhibition devoted
to the finely crafted and researched costumes, objects, and
drawings that Mary Reid Kelley creates for her visually and
intellectually stimulating videos. An essay by curator Daniel
Belasco analyzes the sources and significance of the working
objects in how they promote the unreality effect of Mary Reid
Kelley s videos, which combine both the analog and digital and the
personal and historical. A conversation between Corinna Ripps
Schaming and Mary Reid Kelley and her long-time collaborator
Patrick Kelley reveals insights into their working process. For the
first time, the full range of the artist s costumes, props,
drawings, furniture, and accessories are photographed and presented
as unique works of art."
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Klimt
(Hardcover)
Gilles Neret
1
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R477
R399
Discovery Miles 3 990
Save R78 (16%)
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Ships in 9 - 17 working days
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Gustav Klimt's ornate art expresses the apocalyptic atmosphere of
Vienna's upper middle-class society around the turn of the 20th
century - a society devoted to the cultivation of aesthetic
awareness and the cult of pleasure. The ecstatic joy which Klimt
(1862-1918) and his contemporaries found - or hoped to find - in
beauty was constantly overshadowed by death. And death therefore
plays an important role in Klimt's art. Klimt's fame, however,
rests on his reputation as one of the greatest erotic painters and
graphic artists of his times. His drawings in particular, which
have been widely admired for their artistic excellence, are
dominated by the sensual portrayal of women.
Armed with speakers, turntables, light systems, and records,
Filipino American mobile DJ crews, such as Ultimate Creations,
Spintronix, and Images, Inc., rocked dance floors throughout the
San Francisco Bay Area from the late 1970s through the mid-1990s.
In Legions of Boom noted music and pop culture writer and scholar
Oliver Wang chronicles this remarkable scene that eventually became
the cradle for turntablism. These crews, which were instrumental in
helping to create and unify the Bay Area's Filipino American
community, gave young men opportunities to assert their masculinity
and gain social status. While crews regularly spun records for
school dances, weddings, birthdays, or garage parties, the scene's
centerpieces were showcases-or multi-crew performances-which drew
crowds of hundreds, or even thousands. By the mid-1990s the scene
was in decline, as single DJs became popular, recruitment to crews
fell off, and aspiring scratch DJs branched off into their own
scene. As the training ground for a generation of DJs, including DJ
Q-Bert, Shortkut, and Mix Master Mike, the mobile scene left an
indelible mark on its community that eventually grew to have a
global impact.
Armed with speakers, turntables, light systems, and records,
Filipino American mobile DJ crews, such as Ultimate Creations,
Spintronix, and Images, Inc., rocked dance floors throughout the
San Francisco Bay Area from the late 1970s through the mid-1990s.
In Legions of Boom noted music and pop culture writer and scholar
Oliver Wang chronicles this remarkable scene that eventually became
the cradle for turntablism. These crews, which were instrumental in
helping to create and unify the Bay Area's Filipino American
community, gave young men opportunities to assert their masculinity
and gain social status. While crews regularly spun records for
school dances, weddings, birthdays, or garage parties, the scene's
centerpieces were showcases-or multi-crew performances-which drew
crowds of hundreds, or even thousands. By the mid-1990s the scene
was in decline, as single DJs became popular, recruitment to crews
fell off, and aspiring scratch DJs branched off into their own
scene. As the training ground for a generation of DJs, including DJ
Q-Bert, Shortkut, and Mix Master Mike, the mobile scene left an
indelible mark on its community that eventually grew to have a
global impact.
Discover art that dared to be different, risked reputations and put
careers in jeopardy. This is what happens when artists take
tradition and rip it up. ArtQuake tells the stories of 50 pivotal
works that shook the world, telling the fascinating stories behind
their creation, reception and legacy. The books begin with the
rebels who struck out against Victorian conformism, daring painters
and sculptors like Manet and Rodin, Van Gogh and Courbet, who
experimented with expressionist and realist art styles as well as
controversial subjects. Moving into the fin de siecle and the 20th
century, we study the truly iconic works and turbulent lives of
artists like Munch and Klimt, Picasso and Egon Schiele, whose work
into abstraction, surrealism and cubism shocked and scandalized,
but ultimately changed the course of western art forever. Moving
into the second half of the 20th Century, we see spectacular works
of conceptual rebellion, absurdity and political protest, from Andy
Warhol and the Pop Art movement to Marina Abramovic, whose often
visceral and violent works of performance art laid bare the
savagery of the patriarchy and the human condition. In the 21st
century, we see how iconoclastic creators have pushed the
boundaries of art even further, from Banksy to Louise Bourgeoise,
from self-destructing paintings to experimental works of
computerized art. Complete with beautiful reproductions of their
iconic works, as well as a glossary of terms and movements at the
back, meet the huge egos, uncompromising feminists, gifted
recluses, spiritualists, anti-consumerists, activists and satirists
who have irrevocably carved their names into the history of art
around the world. In telling the history of modern and contemporary
art through the works that were truly disruptive, and explaining
the context in which each was created, ArtQuake demonstrates the
heart of modern art, which is to constantly question and challenge
expectation. This book is from the Culture Quake series, which
looks into iconic moments of culture which truly created paradigm
shifts in their respective fields. Also available is FilmQuake,
which tells the stories of 50 key films that consciously questioned
the boundaries, challenged the status quo and made shockwaves we
are still feeling today.
Waiting at the Shore chronicles the extraordinary life of the
Spanish artist Luis Quintanilla, championed by Ernest Hemingway,
John Dos Passos, Elliot Paul, and many other American and European
writers and artists. In 1912, at the age of 18, he ran off to
Montmartre where, under the influence of his fellow countryman Juan
Gris, he began his artistic career as a Cubist. Returning to Madrid
before the war he befriended prominent Spaniards, including Juan
Negrin, the Premier during the Spanish Civil War. In April 1931 he
and Negrin participated in the peaceful revolution which ousted the
monarchy and installed the Second Spanish Republic. When civil war
broke out Quintanilla helped lead troops on Madrid's Montana
Barracks, which saved the capital for the Republic. "Because great
painters," as Hemingway put it, "are scarcer than good soldiers,"
the Spanish government [Negrin] ordered Quintanilla out of the army
after the fascists were stopped outside Madrid. The artist
completed 140 drawings of the various fronts of the war which were
exhibited at New York's Museum of Modern Art, with a catalogue by
Hemingway. After the Republic lost the war Quintanilla was forced
into an exile which lasted several decades. Living in New York and
in Paris he strove to perfect his art, shunning the modernist
vogues of the time. Although a celebrity when he first arrived in
the United States he eventually fell into obscurity. This volume,
which is heavily illustrated, brings him out of the shadows of
neglect, and provides the compelling story of an artist who led not
just an extraordinary life but left a legacy of paintings and
drawings which, in both their skill and great imaginative variety,
should be known to all art lovers.
This book reinterprets Wifredo Lam's work with particular attention
to its political implications, focusing on how these implications
emerge from the artist's critical engagement with 20th-century
anthropology. Field work conducted in Cuba, including the
witnessing of actual Afro-Cuban religious ritual ceremonies and
information collected from informants, enhances the interpretive
background against which we can construe the meanings of Lam's art.
In the process, Claude Cernuschi argues that Lam hoped to fashion a
new hybrid style to foster pride and dignity in the Afro-Cuban
community, as well as counteract the acute racism of Cuban culture.
Covers approximately 250 sales of Old Masters since 1980, with an
average of five listings from each sale. There are 2,700 signature
examples of 1,700 artists. Three sections following the main body
of this volume offer the researcher easy cross-referencing
monograms and initials, symbols, and alternate names. The appendix
includes supplemental signature information on additional artists
whose actual signatures were not available, but whose importance
could not be omitted.
How to Be a Moonflower, the new book from bestselling author Katie
Daisy, celebrates the magic and mystery of the world at night.
Discover the world that awakens after everyone else has gone to
sleep. In this lavishly illustrated book, New York
Times-bestselling artist Katie Daisy explores the mystery and magic
of the nighttime. Join her on a journey from dusk to dawn, complete
with quotes, poems, meditations, field guides to different
nocturnal flora and fauna, and charts that map out the cosmos. From
night-blooming flowers to cozy campfires, from moon baths to meteor
showers, Katie Daisy's lush illustrations capture the beauty that
comes to life in the darkness. BELOVED AUTHOR: Known for her lush,
painterly artwork and love of the natural world, NEW YORK
TIMES-bestselling author Katie Daisy has 112K followers on
Instagram, where you will find frequent posts featuring her vibrant
illustrations. A CELEBRATION OF NATURE: Nature-lovers and
plant-appreciators will find much to admire in this book.
Illustrating everything from the phases of the moon to fluttering
moths, Katie Daisy has a knack for capturing the very best this
magical world has to offer. EXPLORE THE WONDERS OF NIGHT TIME: The
nighttime offers time for reflection, exploration, and adventure.
This book will help you make the most of those mystical, after-dark
hours and observe the hidden wonders that come to life at night
DELUXE PACKAGE: Featuring a tactile two-piece case with silver
metallic ink on the spine and back cover, How to Be a Moonflower
makes a beautiful gift for the people in your life who look to art
and illustration for creative encouragement, self-exploration, and
mindfulness. Perfect for: * Fans of Katie Daisy's artwork and
previous book HOW TO BE A WILDFLOWER * free spirits * art and
nature lovers * tarot readers and moon worshippers
A unique look at the visionary artist, educator and activist Ruth
Asawa (1926-2013). 'I state, without hesitation or reserve, that I
consider Ruth Asawa to be the most gifted, productive, and
originally inspired artist that I have ever known personally' R.
Buckminster Fuller, 1971 Although less known outside North America,
Japanese-American artist Ruth Asawa is an artist of vital
importance to modern art. Ruth Asawa: Citizen of the Universe,
which accompanies the first exhibition of Asawa's work to be staged
in public galleries in Europe, introduces European audiences to
both Asawa's powerful art - including her signature hanging
sculptures in looped and tied wire - and her pioneering education
practice. It positions her expansive ethos - her
self-identification as 'a citizen of the universe' and belief that
art education can be life enriching for everyone - as a catalyst
for creative forward-thinking in the 21st century. Focusing on a
dynamic and formative period in her life from 1945 to 1980, this
book gives readers a unique experience of the artist and her work,
exploring her legacy from a European perspective and positioning
her as an abstract sculptor crucial to American modernism. It is a
wonderful celebration of her holistic integration of art, education
and community engagement, through which she called for a
revolutionary and inclusive vision of art's role in society.
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