|
Books > Arts & Architecture > Art forms, treatments & subjects > Art treatments & subjects > Individual artists
Nicholas Hilliard has helped form our ideas of the appearance of
Elizabeth I, Mary Queen of Scots, Sir Francis Drake and James I
among others. His painted works open a remarkable window onto the
highest levels of English/British society in the later years of the
sixteenth and the early years of the seventeenth century, the
Elizabethan and Jacobeans ages. In this book Karen Hearn gives us
an intimate portrait of Nicholas Hilliard, his life, his work and
the techniques he used to produce his exquisite miniatures. Karen
Hearn is curator of Sixteenth and Seventeenth-Century Art at the
Tate Britain. She has written on Marcus Gheeraerts II, Dynasties:
Painting in Tudor and Jacobean England 1530-1630 and In
Celebration: The Art of the Country House.
 |
Bill Viola
(Hardcover)
John G. Hanhardt; Edited by Kira Perov
|
R1,317
R1,062
Discovery Miles 10 620
Save R255 (19%)
|
Ships in 12 - 19 working days
|
|
Bill Viola began producing video works in the early 1970s, and
since then has captivated audiences with his poignant and
beautifully wrought interpretations of human experience. He is
today considered among the most celebrated proponents of the medium
of video art. This is the first monograph to chart Viola's career
in full, covering his education in New York, his earliest major
films of mirages in the Sahara desert and of hospital medical
imagery, his retrospective at the Whitney Museum of American Art in
New York 1997 and his recent installations in Venice, New York,
Tokyo, London and Berlin. Hanhardt outlines the key visual,
literary and spiritual influences on Viola's work and his changing
approach to the medium of film in response to technological
advancement. Woven into the discussion are illustrations of Viola's
most significant works, including Information (1973), The Passing,
(1991), The Greeting (1995), Going Forth by Day (2002) and Martyrs,
the 2014 film commissioned for St Paul's Cathedral in London, as
well as reproductions of Viola's sketches and notebooks that bring
his working process to life. Supplemented by a select chronology,
bibliography and list of public collections, Bill Viola offers a
rare and fascinating account of one of contemporary art's most
powerful creative minds.
In his joint capacities of Premier peintre du roi, director of the
Gobelins manufactory and rector of the Academie royale de peinture
et de sculpture, Le Brun exercised a previously unprecedented
influence on the production of the visual arts - so much so that
some scholars have repeatedly described him as 'dictator' of the
arts in France. The Sovereign Artist explores how Le Brun operated
in his diverse fields of activities, linking and juxtaposing his
portraiture, history painting and pictorial theory with his designs
for architecture, tapestries, carpets and furniture. It argues that
Le Brun sought to create a repeatable and easily recognizable
visual language associated with Louis XIV, in order to translate
the king's political claims for absolute power into a visual form.
How he did this is discussed through a series of individual case
studies ranging from Le Brun's lost equestrian portrait of Louis
XIV, and his involvement in the Querelle du coloris at the
Academie, to his scheme for 93 Savonnerie carpets for the Grande
Galerie at the Louvre, his Histoire du roy tapestry series, his
decoration of the now destroyed Escalier des Ambassadeurs at
Versailles and the dramatic destruction of the Sun King's silver
furniture. One key theme is the relation between the unity of the
visual arts, to which Le Brun aspired, and the strong hierarchical
distinctions he made between the liberal arts and the mechanical
crafts: while his lectures at the Academie advocated a visual and
conceptual unity in painting and architecture, they were also a
means by which he attempted to secure the newly gained status of
painting as a liberal art, and therefore to distinguish it from the
mechanical crafts which he oversaw the production of at the
Gobelins. His artistic and architectural aspirations were
comparable to those of his Roman contemporary Gianlorenzo Bernini,
summoned to Paris in 1665 to design the Louvre's East facade and to
create a portrait bust of Louis XIV. Bernini's failure to convince
the king and Colbert of his architectural scheme offered new
opportunities for Le Brun and his French contemporaries to prove
themselves capable of solving the architectural problems of the
Louvre and to transform it into a palace appropriate "to the
grandeur and the magnificence of the prince who [was] to inhabit
it" (Jean-Baptiste Colbert to Nicolas Poussin in 1664). The
comparison between Le Brun and Bernini not only illustrates how
France sought artistic supremacy over Italy during the second half
of the 17th century, but further helps to demonstrate how Le Brun
himself wanted to be perceived: beyond acting as a translator of
the king's artistic ambition, the artist appears to have sought his
own sovereign authority over the visual arts.
Cv/VAR 101 documents a commissioned sculpture by Anish Kapoor for
the Monumenta series at Grand Palais, Paris. An initial
presentation by the artist at his London studio in March,with
curators Jean de Loisy and Mark Sanchez, describes the project,
with reference to scale models, plus a discussion of the 'Orbit
Tower' in process for the 2012 Olympics. Visits 'Leviathan'
installed at the Grand Palais in May.
 |
Yunhee Min
(Hardcover)
Yunhee Min; Notes by Daniel Mendel-Black, Jan Tumlir
|
R700
R616
Discovery Miles 6 160
Save R84 (12%)
|
Ships in 10 - 15 working days
|
|
Vincent van Gogh is best known for two things - his sunflowers and
his ear-cutting. But there are many other ways of knowing this
remarkable son of a Dutch pastor, who left his chill homeland for
the sunshine of Arles in the South of France; and left us over a
thousand frank letters of struggle and joy, to help us glimpse his
inner world. Vincent came late to painting after spending time in
London trying to be a Christian missionary. And though he is now
amongst the most famous artists on earth, in his day, no one saw
him coming - apart from one French art critic called Aurier. It is
possible he never sold one of his paintings in his life time. When
he discovered the sun in Arles, he also discovered energy. Yellow
for him was the colour of hope, and in his last two years he
painted almost a canvass a day. But hope ran out on July 27th ,
1890 when he shot himself, aged 37. He was at this time six months
out of a mental institution, where perhaps he experienced his
greatest calm. Vincent compared himself to a stunted plant; damaged
by the emotional frost of his childhood. 'Conversations with Van
Gogh' is an imagined conversation with this remarkable figure. But
while the conversation is imagined, Van Gogh's words are not; they
are all authentically his. "Speaking with Vincent - which he
insists on being called - was a privilege,' says Simon Parke. 'He's
endlessly fascinating, contradictory, moving, funny, insightful and
tragic. There's a fury in him; but also a great kindness. He found
harmony in human relationships elusive; his love life was a painful
shambles. But with colour, he was a harmonic genius, and he has
much to say about this. And here's the thing: for a man who killed
himself - he died in the arms of his brother on July 29th -
spending time with him was never anything but life-affirming.'
BRICE MARDEN
The American artist Brice Marden (b. 1938) is one of the great
contemporary painters.
Brice Marden's first works were the Minimalist monochrome panels
of the 1960s, large, austere, 'implacable' oil and wax paintings
characterized by a precise coolness. In 1975 Marden had a one-man
show at the Guggenheim Museum.
Laura Garrard looks at Marden's artistic career, from the early
works, the multi-panel works of the 1970s, the Sea Paintings, Grove
Group, Greek and landscape works, and the 'Annunciation Series' and
Thira.
In the 1980s, Brice Marden developed a 'calligraphic' or
'Oriental' art, which appeared in many prints as well as large
canvases.
Brice Marden studied at Florida Southern College, Lakeland, and
Boston University School of Fine and Applied Arts, receiving
aBachelor of Fine Arts in 1961. That year, he worked at Yale
NorfolkSummer School in Connecticut. In 1963 he was awarded a
Master of Fine Arts degree in painting from Yale University at New
Haven.He moved to New York City, and worked as a guard in the
JewishMuseum. At this time he was married to Pauline Baez, the
sister ofJoan Baez, the singer, and had a son, Nicholas.
In the mid-1960s, Marden began to have one-man exhibitions
(typically at Bykert Gallery, where he had many shows). In 1966 he
became an assistant to Robert Rauschenberg. In the late 1960s,
Marden began making multi-panel paintings. He worked as a painting
instructor at the School of Visual Arts in New York from 1969-74.
He had solo shows and group shows in Europe (Milan, Turin, Paris,
Dusseldorf). In 1975 there was the ten-year retrospective at the
Guggenheim in New York, unusual for so young an artist. From 1973,
Marden visited Greece every year.
Other major shows included a one-man exhibition of drawings
(1964-74) at Contemporary Arts Museum, a drawing retrospective at
Kunstraum Munich, and the Whitechapel and Stedelijk Museum,
Amsterdam one-man shows of 1981. An exhibition of prints 1961-91
travelled to the Tate Gallery, London, Baltimore Museum of Art and
the Musee d'art moderne de la ville de Paris.
This is the only full-length appraisal available. Fully
illustrated, with new illustrations. This book has been revised.
ISBN 9781861713728. 200 pages. www.crmoon.com
 |
Lives of Tintoretto
(Paperback)
Giorgio Vasari, Pietro Aretino, Carlo Ridolfi, Andrea Calmo, Veronica Franco, …
|
R295
Discovery Miles 2 950
|
Ships in 12 - 19 working days
|
|
The most exhilarating painter of the Renaissance and arguably of
the whole of western art, Tintoretto was known as Il Furioso
because of the attack and energy of his style. His vaunting
ambition is recorded in the inscription he placed in his studio: l
disegno di Michelangelo ed il colorito di Tiziano ("Michelangelo's
drawing and Titian's colour"). The Florentines Vasari and Borghini,
and the Venetians Ridolfi and Boschini wrote the earliest
biographies of the artist. The four accounts are related to each
other and form the backbone of the critical success of Tintoretto.
Borghini is the first one to give some information about Marietta
Tintoretto, also an artist, and Ridolfi is the richest in anecdotes
about the artist's life and personality - including the one about
the inscription which he may, however, have invented. Boschini, a
witty Venetian nationalist, wrote his account in dialect verse. El
Greco, whose marginal notes to Vasari are included for the first
time in English, Calmo and Franco knew Tintoretto personally and
their writings give a real flavour of this complicated man.
Unavailable in any form for many years, these biographies have been
newly edited for this edition. They are introduced by the scholar
Carlo Corsato, who places each in its artistic and literary
context. Approximately 50 pages of colour illustrations cover the
full range of Tintoretto's astonishing output.
|
You may like...
TLS Mastery
Michael W Lucas
Hardcover
R970
R875
Discovery Miles 8 750
|