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Books > Arts & Architecture > Art forms, treatments & subjects > Art treatments & subjects > Individual artists
George Barbier (1882-1932) is one of the great French illustrators
of the early twentieth century. He is famous for his elegant art
deco works that were heavily influenced by orientalism and Parisian
couture. Born in Nantes, France in 1882, he skyrocketed to fame and
notoriety after his first exhibition in 1911. Known as one of "the
knights of the bracelet" for his luxurious and glamorous lifestyle
and work, George Barbier also received renown for costumes and set
designs he did for theater, film, and ballet. Even today, his
modern and stylish illustrations are popular all over the world.
With critical essays on such topics as coloration and composition,
this volume is a complete compendium of Barbier's work. This
valuable reference book is categorized by Barbier's major projects
in fashion, book illustration, theater art, and editorial design
and is perfect for illustrators and graphic designers as well as a
beautiful gift for someone very special.
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
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Haring-isms
(Hardcover)
Keith Haring; Edited by Larry Warsh
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R425
R393
Discovery Miles 3 930
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Essential quotations from renowned artist and pop icon Keith Haring
Keith Haring remains one of the most important and celebrated
artists of his generation and beyond. Through his signature bold
graphic line drawings of figures and forms dancing and grooving,
Haring's paintings, large-scale public murals, chalk drawings, and
singular graffiti style defined an era and brought awareness to
social issues ranging from gay rights and AIDS to drug abuse
prevention and a woman's right to choose. Haring-isms is a
collection of essential quotations from this creative thinker and
legendary artist. Gathered from Haring's journals and interviews,
these lively quotes reveal his influences and thoughts on a variety
of topics, including birth and death, possibility and uncertainty,
and difference and conformity. They demonstrate Haring's deep
engagement with subjects outside of the art world and his outspoken
commitment to activism. Taken together, this selection reflects
Haring's distinctive voice and reminds us why his work continues to
resonate with fans around the globe. Select quotations from the
book: "Art lives through the imaginations of the people who are
seeing it. Without that contact, there is no art." "It's a huge
world. There are lots and lots and lots of people that I haven't
reached yet that I'd like to reach." "Art is one of the last areas
that is totally within the realm of the human individual and can't
be copied or done better by a machine." "The artist, if he is a
vessel, is also a performer." "No matter how long you work, it's
always going to end sometime. And there's always going to be things
left undone." "I decided to make a major break. New York was the
only place to go." "I came to believe there was no such thing as
chance. If you accept that there are no coincidences, you use
whatever comes along." "There was a migration of artists from all
over America to New York. It was completely wild. And we controlled
it ourselves." "I couldn't go back to the abstract drawings; it had
to have some connection to the real world."
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Basquiat
(Paperback)
Marc Mayer
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R614
R565
Discovery Miles 5 650
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Jean-Michel Basquiat was only twenty-seven when he died in 1988,
his meteoric and often controversial career having lasted for just
eight years. Despite his early death, Basquiat's powerful A uvre
has ensured his continuing reputation as one of modern art's most
distinctive voices. Borrowing from graffiti and street imagery,
cartoons, mythology and religious symbolism, Basquiat's drawings
and paintings explore issues of race and identity, providing social
commentary that is shrewdly observed and biting. This bestselling
book, now available in a compact edition, celebrates Basquiat's
achievements in the contexts of the key influences on his art. It
not only re-evaluates the artist's principal works and their
meaning, but also explains what keeps his painting relevant today.
Collected for the first time in a new translation: two of the most
important and far-reaching biographies of an artist ever written,
and our principal sources for the life of Velazquez. Diego
Velazquez (1599-1660) is for many the greatest painter ever to have
lived. His astonishing naturalism had an immediate and lasting
impact on his contemporaries, inspiring both awe and fierce debate.
Most of what we know about Velazquez' life and incomparably
successful career comes from these two biographies. Francisco
Pacheco, a second rank painter, was Velazquez' teacher and
eventually father-in-law - possibly the closest relationship
between a painter and his biographer in all art. This Life, part of
Pacheco's theoretical work, the Art of Painting, has never been
translated before, and it reveals the scale of the challenge to
traditional painting presented by Velazquez' insurmountable talent.
Antonio Palomino, the Spanish Vasari, was born just after Velazquez
died, but knew many of the painter's friends and colleagues. His
biography, precise and detailed, is an incomparable source, but
like Pacheco's text, also tackles the aesthetic debate engendered
by Velazquez' choice of subject matter and style. Together these
biographies give an excitingly close insight into the mind and
world of a great painter. The introduction by Michael Jacobs
situates these biographies in the context of Spain's Golden Age,
and the intellectual ferment in painting and in the theatre that
lie behind Velazquez' magic. The translations are by Nina Ayala
Mallory, the leading scholar of Spanish artistic biographies. The
volume is richly illustrated with 30 plates illustrating the full
gamut of Velazquez' work.
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Noms De Guerres
(Paperback)
Olaf Nicolai; Edited by Olaf Nicolai, Markus Dressen
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R807
Discovery Miles 8 070
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Rembrandt Harmenszoon van Rijn was the leading painter and graphic
artist of the 'Golden Age of Dutch Art'. He excelled in imbuing his
art with the 'deepest and most lifelike emotion', with rich detail
and stunning lighting. This richly enjoyable book gives the reader
an illuminating overview of the life, work and influences of the
artist, before going on to showcase the most stunning and varied
examples of his oeuvre, broken down into themes - Portraits,
Landscape & Narrative, Self-portraits, and Etchings &
Drawings. Discover his versatility in the range of works selected,
from the electric The Storm on the Sea of Galilee to the treasured
The Night Watch, with its triumph in chiaroscuro and energy. A
visual feast, it will underline the artist's status as a true
master.
The three plays and the libretto in this collection were all
written by Judith Weinshall Liberman when she was in her eighties.
All four dramatic works are semi-autobiographical and give
expression to the insight the author gained through half a century
of creating visual art and of writing. The rst play, SOUL MATE, was
inspired by Ms. Liberman's collaboration with a gifted young
composer on her own rst musical play. Both VINCENT'S VISIT and
JUDITH AND ANNE were inspired by the author's experience as a
visual artist, especially by the years she devoted to creating her
three series of artworks about the Holocaust. TO BE AN ARTIST
integrates elements from VINCENT'S VISIT and JUDITH AND ANNE into a
musical play in which the characters express themselves not only
through frank dialogue but also in twenty lyrics which provide
insight into their minds and hearts. Also included in the book are
black-and-white reproductions of twenty- ve of Judith Weinshall
Liberman's artworks. These reproductions are designed to help the
reader better understand some of the matters discussed in the book.
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Goya
(Hardcover)
Francois Crastre; Translated by Frederick Taber Cooper
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R631
Discovery Miles 6 310
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Will Eisner's innovations in the comics, especially the comic
book and the graphic novel, as well as his devotion to comics
analysis, make him one of comics' first true auteurs and the
cartoonist so revered and influential that cartooning's highest
honor is named after him. His newspaper feature "The Spirit"
(1940-1952) introduced the now-common splash page to the comic
book, as well as dramatic angles and lighting effects that were
influenced by, and influenced in turn, the conventions of film
noir. Even in his tales of crime fighting, Eisner's writing focused
on everyday details of city life and on contemporary social issues.
In 1976, he premiered "A Contract with God, and Other Tenement
Stories," a collection of realist cartoon stories that paved the
way for the modern "graphic novel." His 1985 book, "Comics and
Sequential Art," was among the first sustained analyses and
overviews of the comics form, articulating theories of the art's
grammar and structure. Eisner's studio nurtured such comics legends
as Jules Feiffer, Wally Wood, Lou Fine, and Jack Cole.
"Will Eisner: Conversations," edited by comics scholar M. Thomas
Inge, collects the best interviews with Eisner (1917-2005) from
1965 to 2004. Taken together, the interviews cover the breadth of
Eisner's career with in-depth information about his creation of
"The Spirit" and other well-known comic book characters, his
devotion to the educational uses of the comics medium, and his
contributions to the development of the graphic novel.
'Ought to become a classic. It is an enshrinement of [Meades's]
intense baroque and catholic cleverness' Roger Lewis, The Times
'One of the foremost prose stylists of his age in any register . .
. Probably we don't deserve Meades, a man who apparently has never
composed a dull paragraph' Steven Poole, Guardian 'There are more
gems in this wonderful book than I could cram into a dozen of these
columns' Simon Heffer, Daily Telegraph 'Such a useful and important
critic . . . He is very much on the reader's side, bringing his
full wit to bear on every single thing he writes' Nicholas Lezard,
Spectator This landmark publication collects three decades of
writing from one of the most original, provocative and consistently
entertaining voices of our time. Anyone who cares about language
and culture should have this book in their life. Thirty years ago,
Jonathan Meades published a volume of reportorial journalism,
essays, criticism, squibs and fictions called Peter Knows What Dick
Likes. The critic James Wood was moved to write: 'When journalism
is like this, journalism and literature become one.' Pedro and
Ricky Come Again is every bit as rich and catholic as its
predecessor. It is bigger, darker, funnier and just as impervious
to taste and manners. It bristles with wit and pin-sharp eloquence,
whether Meades is contemplating northernness in a German forest or
hymning the virtues of slang. From the indefensibility of
nationalism and the ubiquitous abuse of the word 'iconic', to John
Lennon's shopping lists and the wine they call Black Tower, the
work assembled here demonstrates Meades's unparalleled range and
erudition, with pieces on cities, artists, sex, England, France,
concrete, faith, politics, food, history and much, much more.
A Kenyan upbringing is the ticket to this voyage into a remarkably
real created world entered via carved, integrating frames. Twice
TVs pick of the show at the Royal Academies and with crowds and fan
mail at a third RA Summer Exhibition, James remains a virtual
unknown in his own country. A production rate averaging just one
painting a year may account for this, but in an Art World where
price is all, his output is sufficient to net him a viable living
selling internationally. Also introducing the remarkable paintings
of his artist son Alexander James. Together their art is akin to a
vigorous breath of fresh air in a stuffy room.
Born in Berlin in 1931 to Jewish parents, the eight-year-old
Auerbach was sent to England in 1939 to escape the Nazi regime. His
parents stayed behind and died in a concentration camp in 1943. Now
in his eighties, Auerbach is still producing his distinctly
sculptural paintings of friends, family and surroundings in north
London, where he has made his home since the war. The art historian
and curator Catherine Lampert has had unique access to the artist
since 1978 when she first became one of his sitters. With an
emphasis on Auerbach's own words, culled from her conversations
with him and archival interviews, she provides a rare insight into
his professional life, working methods and philosophy. Auerbach
also reflects on the places, people and inspirations that have
shaped his life. These include his experiences as a refugee child,
finding his way in the London art world of the 1950s and 1960s, his
friendships with Lucian Freud, Francis Bacon and Leon Kossoff,
among many others, and his approaches to looking and painting
throughout his career. For anyone interested in how an artist
approaches his craft or his method of capturing reality this is
essential reading.
John Coatsworth has produced some of the most instantly
recognisable images of Tyneside over the last 12 years. This
beautiful book includes many of the famous Newcastle landmarks
including the Quayside, the Tyne Bridge, Grey Street and St James'
Park have all been depicted in his unique 'bendy' style. This
dramatic and distinctive style is in great demand.
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