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Books > Arts & Architecture > Art forms, treatments & subjects > Art treatments & subjects > Individual artists
Robert Smithson and the American Landscape is a social history of
the artist's earthworks and their critical reception. Providing a
close analysis of Smithson's own writings and art works, Ron
Graziani demonstrates how his earthworks were part of an aesthetic
and civic fault line that ruptured in the 1960s. Smithson's
humanized environments were a powerful indictment of modernist
sense of art and nature. Moreover, Graziani shows how Smithson's
earthworks formed part of what was called the 'new conservationism'
in the late 1960s and how they gave material form to the
contradictions of a sociological issue that was inseparable from
its economic legacy.
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Banksy
(Hardcover)
Stefano Antonelli
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R1,014
R868
Discovery Miles 8 680
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This monograph gathers and presents the largest assemblage in one
volume about the life, work, and ideas of Banksy - the world's most
discussed artist of recent decades. Featuring hundreds of works -
Girl with Balloon, Mickey Snake, Dismaland, Love is in the Air,
Barcode, Monkey Queen -- the book includes reproductions of
paintings, serigraphs, and stencils. The most iconic works are
here, but so too are numerous installation objects and a selection
of memorabilia all with the official approval of Pest Control, the
group that manages all things Banksy. Banksy is considered the
world's greatest practitioner of street art at work today. His work
has always implied political critiques - of inequality, injustice,
discrimination, consumerism, pollution, and the establishment. But,
Banksy is a ghost -- no one knows his identity. He is an exemplary
case of fame and notoriety built upon absence, anonymity, and the
denial of one's explicit contribution to the public debate if not
in terms of creative activism. Banksy's relationship with the art
market is also complex: at the same time mocking, distant, and
hostile and yet all he does is based upon a marketing logic that
has proven to be among the most effective ever attempted. In short,
an apparent (or real) contradiction between adhesion to the market
and ferocious criticism of the market itself. This volume is
published to coincide with a major traveling exhibition of over one
hundred Banksy works, but it is sure to be a must have for art
lovers and Banksy fans alike for years to come.
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Frances Hodgkins
(Hardcover)
Samantha Niederman; Series edited by Katy Norris; Edited by Rebeka Cohen; Designed by Clare Skeats
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R340
Discovery Miles 3 400
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Due to the huge success of her graphic memoir Fun Home: A Family
Tragicomic in 2006 and its subsequent Tony Award-winning musical
adaptation in 2009, Alison Bechdel (b. 1960) has recently become a
household name. However, Bechdel, who has won numerous awards
including a MacArthur Fellowship, has been writing and drawing
comics since the early 1980s. Her comic strip Dykes to Watch Out
For (DTWOF) stood out as one of the first to depict lesbians in
popular culture and is widely hailed as an essential LGBTQ
resource. It is also from this comic strip that the wildly popular
Bechdel Test-a test to gauge positive female representation in
film-obtained its name. While DTWOF secured Bechdel's role in the
comics world and queer community long before her mainstream
success, Bechdel now experiences notoriety that few comics artists
ever achieve and that women cartoonists have never attained.
Spanning from 1990 to 2017, Alison Bechdel: Conversations collects
ten interviews that illustrate how Bechdel uses her own life,
relationships, and contemporary events to expose the world to what
she has referred to as the ""fringes of acceptability""-the comics
genre as well as queer culture and identity. These interviews
reveal her intentionality in the use of characters, plots,
structure, and cartooning to draw her readers toward disrupting the
status quo. Starting with her earliest interviews on public access
television and in little-known comics and queer presses, Rachel R.
Martin traces Bechdel's career from her days with DTWOF to her
popularity with Fun Home and Are You My Mother? This volume
includes her ""one-off"" DTWOF strips from November 2016 and March
2017 (not anthologized anywhere else) and in-depth discussions of
her laborious creative process as well as upcoming projects.
Francine Prose's life of Caravaggio evokes the genius of this great
artist through a brilliant reading of his paintings. Caravaggio
defied the aesthetic conventions of his time; his use of ordinary
people, realistically portrayed-street boys, prostitutes, the poor,
the aged-was a profound and revolutionary innovation that left its
mark on generations of artists. His insistence on painting from
nature, on rendering the emotional truth of experience, whether
religious or secular, makes him an artist who speaks across the
centuries to our own time. In "Caravaggio", Francine Prose presents
the brief but tumultuous life of one of the greatest of all
painters with passion and acute sensitivity.
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Lives of Giovanni Bellini
(Paperback)
Giorgio Vasari, Carlo Ridolfi, Marco Boschini, Isabella D'Este, Davide Gasparotto
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R307
R266
Discovery Miles 2 660
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Scion of an artistic dynasty, Giovanni Bellini is arguably the
greatest Venetian painter of the early Renaissance. His astonishing
naturalism revolutionised altarpiece painting and is still a source
of wonder, as any visit to Frari in Venice will confirm. Most of
what we know about this great artist comes from the earliest
biographies by Vasari and Ridolfi printed here - the Ridolfi never
before translated into English. A different and very personal
insight is given by extensive correspondence with Bellini's great
but neglected patron Isabella d'Este.
ABOUT THE BOOK: My Jonah Journey: Developing an Attitude of
Gratitude is the true story of Linda M. Brandt's triumphant journey
through a series of Job-like catastrophic experiences: the tragic
death of her teenaged son, the discovery of a rare brain tumor and
the precarious surgery that followed, the horrendous episode of
spinal meningitis, and then her own near-death experience. For four
minutes and with doctors working frantically, Linda lay
heart-stopped and unbreathing on a cold hospital table next to the
MRI tunnel where her son, Scottie, had been sent to bring her home.
But God had other plans. Now for the first time in book form, Linda
M. Brandt shares her three-year "Jonah journey," describing how she
replaced fear and despair with an attitude of gratitude as she
learned to walk again, to drive, to paint, to undertake normal
day-to-day activities, and then finally to do them alone. Of
course, Linda is the first to say she never really was alone.
Doctors told her, "We never see people like you again. They just go
into their houses and go away." But because of God's grace, Linda's
was a different journey. My Jonah Journey: Developing an Attitude
of Gratitude will inspire even the most skeptic among us and reveal
the One who loves us very, very much. **** ABOUT THE AUTHOR: Linda
M. Brandt is a Christian, wife, mother, author, and renowned artist
with an undeniable love for God and life. Against all odds and
medical prognoses, Ms. Brandt not only survived brain surgery,
spinal meningitis, and a near-death experience, but she thrived,
regaining full physical and mental function, including her
remarkable skills as a world-renowned artist whose paintings have
been displayed from Paris to London and from New York City to
Laguna Beach. In this new book, My Jonah Journey: Developing an
Attitude of Gratitude, Ms. Brandt presents her miraculous story
along with stunning original artwork she created to illustrate her
journey.
Rachel Owen's hauntingly beautiful illustrations for Dante's
Inferno take a radically new approach to representing the world of
Dante's famous poem. The images combine the artist's deep cultural
and historical understanding of 'The Divine Comedy' and its
artistic legacy with her unique talent for collage and printmaking.
These illustrations, casting the viewer as a first-person pilgrim
through the underworld, prompt us to rethink Dante's poem through
their novel perspective and visual language. Owen's work, held in
the Bodleian Library and published here for the first time,
illustrates the complete cycle of thirty-four cantos of the Inferno
with one image per canto. The illustrations are accompanied by
essays contextualising Owen's work and supplemented by six
illustrations intended for the unfinished Purgatorio series. Fiona
Whitehouse provides details of the techniques employed by the
artist, Peter Hainsworth situates Owen's work in the field of
modern Dante illustration and David Bowe offers a commentary on the
illustrations as gateways to Dante's poem. Jamie McKendrick and
Bernard O'Donoghue's translations of episodes from the 'Inferno'
provide complementary artistic interpretations of Dante's poem,
while reflections from colleagues and friends commemorate Owen's
life and work as an artist, scholar and teacher. This stunning
collection is an important contribution to both Dante scholarship
and illustration.
At once familiar and hard to place, the work of acclaimed Canadian
cartoonist Seth evokes a world that no longer exists - and perhaps
never existed, except in the panels of long-forgotten comics.
Seth's distinctive drawing style strikingly recalls a bygone era of
cartooning, an apt vehicle for melancholy, gently ironic narratives
that depict the grip of the past on the present. Even when he
appears to look to the past, however, Seth (born Gregory Gallant)
is constantly pushing the medium of comics forward with
sophisticated work that often incorporates metafiction, parody, and
formal experimentation. Forging the Past offers a comprehensive
account of this work and the complex interventions it makes into
the past. Moving beyond common notions of nostalgia, Daniel Marrone
explores the various ways in which Seth's comics induce readers to
participate in forging histories and memories. Marrone discusses
collecting, Canadian identity, New Yorker cartoons, authenticity,
artifice, and ambiguity - all within the context comics' unique
structure and texture. Seth's comics are suffused with longing for
the past, but on close examination this longing is revealed to be
deeply ambivalent, ironic, and self-aware. Marrone undertakes the
most thorough, sustained investigation of Seth's work to date,
while advancing a broader argument about how comics operate as a
literary medium. Included as an appendix is a substantial
interview, conducted by the author, in which Seth candidly
discusses his work, his peers, and his influences.
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Corot
(Hardcover)
Sidney Allnutt
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R630
Discovery Miles 6 300
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Turner
(Paperback)
Cecilia Powell
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R118
Discovery Miles 1 180
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Turner's work is famous throughout the world. He transformed
British landscape painting from a minor art to a highly respected
one with huge power and range.. This beautifully illustrated guide
looks at the man and his influences, and takes a route though
Europe and Britain as his artistic life flowers and matures. Look
out for more Pitkin Guides on the very best of British art,
history, heritage and travel.
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Pattern Book
(Hardcover)
Christopher Russell; Notes by Holly Myers, Kevin Killian
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R1,423
R1,176
Discovery Miles 11 760
Save R247 (17%)
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Ships in 10 - 15 working days
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"Russell weaves his writing into pictures... He chops his text into
geometric shapes, casts it in rainbow colors and visually
assaultive fonts, and scratches it onto photographs. In the work
contained here, in Pattern Book, he laces text into art nouveau
wallpaper, dissolving his stories into a swooning screen of
domestic pattern. At every turn, it seems, Russell throws some
wrench into the cogs of literary consumption, slowing the reader
down, jostling expectations, demanding attention-challenging the
reader, in other words, to really want to be reading."-Holly Myers
Pattern Book by Christopher Russell collects a number of images and
texts, images woven through texts, and texts woven together through
images. Kevin Killian, author of Impossible Princess (City Lights
2009), says, "I was born wanting a Christopher Russell to join me
in this confusing world.... I wanted a boy with confused gaze,
mortified as I am by the harsh and ugly crumples of life, but one
who, with bold decisive strokes, could hack a pathway out if it.
... Russell's method, in which he dethrones language's hegemony
over rival visual formations by distorting and exaggerating its
recognizable, even homey, patterns borrows roots from many
traditions. Medieval monks are said to have curried favor with
abbots by carving Bible verses into the head of a pin. ... When
language, or the image, is enervated, the work of art has room for
other connotations to manifest. ... And in these beautiful pages we
will see, and we will not see, things it will take us a hundred
years to understand."
In her ever-evolving career, the legendary filmmaker Agnes Varda
has gone from being a photographer at the Avignon festival in the
late 1940s, through being a director celebrated at the Cannes
festival (Cleo de 5 a 7, 1962), to her more ironic self-proclaimed
status as a 'jeune artiste plasticienne'. She has recently staged
mixed-media projects and exhibitions all over the world from Paris
(2006) to Los Angeles (2013-14) and the latest 'tour de France'
with JR (2015-16). Agnes Varda Unlimited: Image, Music, Media
reconsiders the legacy and potential of Varda's radical tour de
force cinematique, as seen in the 22-DVD 'definitive' Tout(e)
Varda, and her enduring artistic presence. These essays discuss not
just when, but also how and why, Varda's renewed artistic forms
have ignited with such creative force, and have been so inspiring
an influence. The volume concludes with two remarkable interviews:
one with Varda herself, and another rare contribution from the
leading actress of Cleo de 5 a 7, Corinne Marchand. Marie-Claire
Barnet is Senior Lecturer in French at Durham University.
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