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Books > Arts & Architecture > Art forms, treatments & subjects > Painting & paintings
Internationally recognized for his ability to blend space and light
with great contextual sensitivity, architect Steven Holl achieves
his award-winning designs by beginning each commission with a small
watercolor exploring light, color, and form. Paintings help Holl
create a concept-driven design that showcases the unique qualities
of each project. This collection of watercolors, which are works of
art themselves, includes his most recent projects, from the JFK
Center for the Performing Arts expansion and Hunters Point Public
Library to University College Dublin.
Caspar David Friedrich (1774-1840) is heralded as the greatest
painter of the Romantic movement in Germany, and Europe's first
truly modern artist. His mysterious and melancholy landscapes,
often peopled with lonely wanderers, are experiments in a radically
subjective artistic perspective--one in which, as Freidrich wrote,
the painter depicts not "what he sees before him, but what he sees
within him." This vulnerability of the individual when confronted
with nature became one of the key tenets of the Romantic aesthetic.
Now available in a compact, accessible format, this beautifully
illustrated book is the most comprehensive account ever published
in English of one of the most fascinating and influential
nineteenth-century painters. "This is a model of interpretative art
history, taking in a good deal of German Romantic philosophy, but
founded always on the immediate experience of the picture. . . . It
is rare to find a scholar so obviously in sympathy with his
subject."--"Independent"
Without question, the tache (blot, patch, stain) is a central and
recurring motif in nineteenth-century modernist painting. Manet's
and the Impressionists' rejection of academic finish produced a
surface where the strokes of paint were presented directly, as
patches or blots, then indirectly as legible signs. Cezanne,
Seurat, and Signac painted exclusively with patches or dots.
Through a series of close readings, this book looks at the tache as
one of the most important features in nineteenth-century modernism.
The tache is a potential meeting point between text and image and a
pure trace of the artist's body. Even though each manifestation of
tacheism generates its own specific cultural effects, this book
represents the first time a scholar has looked at tacheism as a
hidden continuum within modern art. With a methodological framework
drawn from the semiotics of text and image, the author introduces a
much-needed fine-tuning to the classic terms index, symbol, and
icon. The concept of the tache as a 'crossing' of sign-types
enables finer distinctions and observations than have been
available thus far within the Peircean tradition. The
'sign-crossing' theory opens onto the whole terrain of interaction
between visual art, art criticism, literature, philosophy, and
psychology.
Portraits of Queen Marie Leszczinska (1703-1768) were highly
visible in eighteenth-century France. Appearing in royal chateaux
and, after 1737, in the Parisian Salons, the queen's image was
central to the visual construction of the monarchy. Her earliest
portraits negotiated aspects of her ethnic difference, French
gender norms, and royal rank to craft an image of an appropriate
consort to the king. Later portraits by Maurice-Quentin de La Tour,
Carle Van Loo, and Jean-Marc Nattier contributed to changing
notions of queenship over the course of her 43 year tenure. Whether
as royal wife, devout consort, or devoted mother, Marie
Leszczinska's image mattered. While she has often been seen as a
weak consort, this study argues that queenly images were powerful
and even necessary for Louis XV's projection of authority. This is
the first study dedicated to analyzing the queen's portraits. It
engages feminist theory while setting the queen's image in the
context of portraiture in France, courtly factional conflict, and
the history of the French monarchy. While this investigation is
historically specific, it raises the larger problem of the power of
women's images versus the empowerment of women, a challenge that
continues to plague the representation of political women today.
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Herve Martijn
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The author contrasts primitive & naive painting through the
life & work of 2 of Cornwall's distinctive artists. The survey
concludes with brief profiles of a dozen other artists whose
individual visions have enriched the life of this celebrated
artist's c
In 1802, at the age of 26, Joseph Mallord William Turner became the
youngest ever member of the Royal Academy. A prolific painter and
watercolourist, his paintings began by combining great historical
themes with the inspired visions of nature, but his experimentation
with capturing the effects of light led him swiftly towards an
unusual dissolution of forms. Turner was a constant traveller, not
only within the British Isles but also throughout Europe, from the
Alps to the banks of the Rhine, from northern France to Rome and
Venice. His death in 1851 revealed not only his zealously guarded
private life but also a will that left both his fortune and more
than thirty thousand drawings, watercolours and paintings to the
nation. In this profusely illustrated book, Olivier Meslay invites
us to follow the development of Turner's incandescent art, a bridge
between Romanticism and Impressionism and one of Britain's most
remarkable contributions to art history.
First published in 1984. The late nineteenth and early twentieth
centuries represent not only era of rapidly changing artistic
methods but a crucial evolution in art criticism. This book gathers
together a wide-range of the criticism that greeted the work of the
Impressionists artists in the English Press. The selected examples
of praise and antagonism reflect the sentiments expressed in the
comments of prominent newspaper and periodical critics. The
selection shows the importance of Impressionist art to English art
criticism and wide comprehension of the formal qualities in
painting. It also demonstrates how forward-looking critics created
new criteria for the discussion of modern painting.
This book attempts to expand the grounds and methodology of
studying Japanese art history by focusing on the conditions,
procedures, events, and social interplay that characterized the
production of paintings in late-fifteenth-century Japan.
Though the book's ultimate concerns are art historical, its
analysis also draws heavily from the insights of sociology and
social history. At its core is a fresh examination of the major
primary documents of the period in an attempt to liberate the study
from assumptions long embedded in the historiography of late
medieval Japanese painting history. Early chapters describe
documents, methods, basic sites, and conditions of painting before
turning to the main contribution of the book, painting considered
as a body of social practices. The production of painting in the
late fifteenth century was profoundly social, dynamically related
to the circumstances of its agents. Painters, advisors, assistants,
clients, and others did not exert themselves simply to bring
paintings into existence. They sought advantages (such as wealth
and prestige), met obligations, and satisfied the demands of
custom.
Surviving documents from the period present rich evidence of the
involvement of such persons in the imperial court, the
Ashikaya-Gozan community, the great temples of Nara, and the halls
of local lords. The author takes into account the patterns of
expectation that existed at the various sites but does not construe
them as static and mechanically determined. Rather, he shows that
expectations evolved in response to changed conditions. Although
this study specifically addresses the last quarter of the fifteenth
century, it can aid future research in Japanese painting practice
in other eras by serving as a model of how new interpretations can
emerge from close documentary investigation.
Sold in packs of 6. Gorgeous, foiled, handmade greeting cards,
blank inside and shrink-wrapped with a gold envelope. Themed with
our art calendars, foiled notebooks and illustrated art books. Our
greeting cards are printed on FSC paper and wrapped in
biodegradeable cellobag, and are themed with our art calendars,
foiled notebooks and illustrated art books. This example features
Jean and Ron Henry's Moon Maiden. The vogue for fairy painting grew
out of the Romantic movement, when there was a revival of interest
in the nation's cultural heritage, including such mythological
beings as fairies. The magic of these creatures continues to
inspire artists to this day and Jean and Ron Henry's Moon Maiden is
a charming, modern slant on the fairy world.
Painting is a continually expanding and evolving medium. The
radical changes that have taken place since the 1960s and 1970s -
the period that saw the shift from a modernist to a postmodernist
visual language - have led to its reinvigoration as a practice,
lending it an energy and diversity that persist today. In
Contemporary Painting, renowned critic and art historian Suzanne
Hudson offers an intelligent and original survey of the subject: a
rigorous critical snapshot that brings together more than 250
renowned artists from around the world, whose ideas and aesthetics
characterize the painting of our time. These luminaries include
Cecily Brown, Theaster Gates, Josh Smith, Jenny Saville, Julie
Mehretu, Takashi Murakami, Gabriel Orozco, Christina Quarles, Kara
Walker, Kehinde Wiley, Zhang Xiaogang and many others. Organized
into seven thematic chapters exploring aspects of contemporary
painting, this is an essential volume for art history enthusiasts,
students, critics and practitioners. With 245 illustrations in
colour
This book awaited artist's manual is the first definitive
sourcebook of its kind. In it, William Veasey teaches decorative
decoy artists to accurately paint the details of waterfowl and
gamebird bills and feet, as well as those of birds of prey. Bills
and Feet is an authoritative work which will allow the craftsman to
achieve a more lifelike effect with his carvings. Illustrated in
full color, it is a must for the serious decoy artist.
The first specialized critical-aesthetic study to be published on
the concept of hybridity in early Mughal painting, this book
investigates the workings of the diverse creative forces that led
to the formation of a unique Mughal pictorial language. Mughal
pictoriality distinguishes itself from the Persianate models
through the rationalization of the picture's conceptual structure
and other visual modes of expression involving the aesthetic
concept of mimesis. If the stylistic and iconographic results of
this transformational process have been well identified and
evidenced, their hermeneutic interpretation greatly suffers from
the neglect of a methodologically updated investigation of the
images' conceptual underpinning. Valerie Gonzalez addresses this
lacuna by exploring the operations of cross-fertilization at the
level of imagistic conceptualization resulting from the
multifaceted encounter between the local legacy of Indo-Persianate
book art, the freshly imported Persian models to Mughal India after
1555 and the influx of European art at the Mughal court in the
sixteenth and seventeenth centuries. The author's close examination
of the visuality, metaphysical order and aesthetic language of
Mughal imagery and portraiture sheds new light on this particular
aspect of its aesthetic hybridity, which is usually approached
monolithically as a historical phenomenon of cross-cultural
interaction. That approach fails to consider specific parameters
and features inherent to the artistic practice, such as the
differences between doxis and praxis, conceptualization and
realization, intentionality and what lies beyond it. By studying
the distinct phases and principles of hybridization between the
variegated pictorial sources at work in the Mughal creative process
at the successive levels of the project/intention, the
practice/realization and the result/product, the author deciphers
the modalities of appropriation and manipulation of the
heterogeneous elements. Her unique
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 focuses on the earliest surviving Christian icons, dated
to the sixth and seventh centuries, which bear many resemblances to
three other well-established genres of 'sacred portrait' also
produced during late antiquity, namely Roman imperial portraiture,
Graeco-Egyptian funerary portraiture and panel paintings depicting
non-Christian deities. Andrew Paterson addresses two fundamental
questions about devotional portraiture - both Christian and
non-Christian - in the late antique period. Firstly, how did
artists visualise and construct these images of divine or
sanctified figures? And secondly, how did their intended viewers
look at, respond to, and even interact with these images? Paterson
argues that a key factor of many of these portrait images is the
emphasis given to the depicted gaze, which invites an intensified
form of personal encounter with the portrait's subject. The book
will be of interest to scholars working in art history, theology,
religion and classical studies.
This lavishly illustrated book records the high profile restoration
of Rembrandt van Rijn's 17th century masterpiece, The Night Watch,
one of the world's most famous paintings. Many questions about the
creation of this work have been answered by extensive technical
studies done in conjunction with the restoration. The popular Dutch
TV program The Secret of the Master has documented the restoration
of The Night Watch in four episodes, assisted in this by various
external specialists. This book, by the producer of that series,
reveals the many secrets of this fascinating and important work.
Gustave Klimt (1862-1918) was one of the most brilliant artists of
the Austrian avant-garde. Admired for his sensual images of women
and for his powerful and original vision, he produced some of the
most haunting and evocative images of all time, including The Kiss,
Love and The Three Ages of Woman, all of which are included in this
perfect introduction to the artist's work. Klimt started out as a
decorator, opening a studio with his brother Ernst. Some of his
most famous commissions were for murals, including the magnificent
Beethoven Frieze, painted for the exhibition of Max Klinger's
statue of Beethoven, and the monumental ceiling paintings for the
auditorium of Vienna University, which shocked a conservative
public. A founder of Vienna Secession, the band of artists who
resigned from the established art bodies to form their own group,
Klimt became the principal painter of the Art Nouveau movement,
painting glittering portraits of fashionable Viennese society as
well as
The rise of critical realism in nineteenth-century Russia
culminated in 1870 with the formation of the Wanderers, Russia's
first independent artistic society. Through depictions of the harsh
lives of the peasantry, the fate of political activists, Russian
history, landscapes, and portraits of the nation's cultural elite,
such as Tolstoy and Dostoevsky, the society became synonymous with
dissident sentiments. Yet its members were far from being purveyors
of anti-Tsarist propaganda and their canvases reflect also a warm
humanity and a fierce pride for such nationalistic themes as
Russian myth and legend. Through close readings of single canvases,
investigations of major themes and a multi-disciplinary integration
of the Wanderers within Russian society, this book gives the first
comprehensive analysis of the crucial cultural role played by one
of the most successful and genuinely popular schools of art, the
legacy of which comprises a fascinating panorama of life and
thought in pre-revolutionary Russia. -- .
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.
Each year between 1819 and 1825, John Constable (1776-1837)
submitted a monumental canvas to the Royal Academy of Arts in
London for display in the annual Exhibition. These so-called
six-footers vividly captured the life of the River Stour in
Suffolk, where Constable grew up and where he returned to paint
each year. The Leaping Horse, the last of these, now a major work
in the Academy's collection, is the subject of this fascinating new
book. Humphreys explores Constable's often avant-garde working
methods, as well as his struggle to gain full acceptance within the
art establishment of the early nineteenth century. With
reproductions of his full-scale preliminary sketches as well as
brand new photography of the painting itself, this book is the
ideal companion for art lovers who seek a deeper appreciation of
Constable's iconic depictions of the English countryside.
Hand lettering books continue to sell well, and watercolor is an
increasingly popular niche Author is a modern calligrapher with an
Instagram following of over 150,000 Features over 200 full color,
step-by-step photos
William Turnbull (1922-2012) stands as one of Britain's foremost
artists in the second half of the twentieth century. Both a
sculptor and a painter, he explored the changing contemporary world
and its ancient past, actively engaging with the shifting concerns
of British, European and American artists. Presenting
interpretations of Turnbull's work from an impressive roll-call of
over sixty art historians, curators, critics and artists, a picture
emerges of an innovative artist who determinedly followed his own
path, drawing on influences as diverse as ancient cultures and
contemporary music. Expansive in its breadth, William Turnbull:
International Modern Artist will stand as the authoritative book on
this fascinating artist. With contributions by Oliva Bax, Paul
Becker, Andrew Bick, Antonia Bostroem, Mel Brimfield, Bianca Chu,
Matthew Collings, Ann Compton, Sam Cornish, Keith Coventry, Elena
Crippa, Amanda A. Davidson, Michael Dean, John Dee, Richard
Demarco, Edith Devaney, Norman Dilworth, Patrick Elliott, Ann
Elliott, Garth Evans, Pat Fisher, Neil Gall, Margaret Garlake,
Antony Gormley, Kirstie Gregory, Kelly Grovier, Nigel Hall, Bill
Hare, Daniel F. Herrmann, Peter Hide, Ben Highmore, Nick Hornby,
Tess Jaray, Julia Kelly, Phillip King, Liliane Lijn, Clare Lilley,
Jeff Lowe, Tim Martin, Ian McKeever, Henry Meyric Hughes, Catherine
Moriarty, Richard Morphet, Jed Morse, Peter Murray, Matt Price,
Peter Randall-Page, Guggi Rowen, Natalie Rudd, Michael Sandle,
Dawna Schuld, Sean Scully, Jyrki Siukonen, Chris Stephens, Peter
Suchin, Marin R. Sullivan, Mike Tooby, William Tucker, Johnny
Turnbull, Alex Turnbull, Michael Uva, Brian Wall, Nigel Walsh,
Calvin Winner, Jon Wood, Bill Woodrow, Greville Worthington, Emily
Young
Part of an exciting series of sturdy, square-box 1000-piece jigsaw
puzzles from Flame Tree, featuring powerful and popular works of
art. This new jigsaw will satisfy your need for a challenge, with
Marianne North's Amatungula in Flower and Fruit and Blue Ipomoea,
South Africa.. This 1000 piece jigsaw is intended for adults and
children over 13 years. Not suitable for children under 3 years due
to small parts. Finished Jigsaw size 735 x 510mm/29 x 20 ins.
Includes an A4 poster for reference. The Royal Botanic Gardens, Kew
is a world famous centre for botanical and mycological knowledge.
Kew has a gallery dedicated to the paintings of the remarkable
Victorian artist Marianne North, who had a great eye for botanical
detail. She set out in 1871 on a painterly progress through world
flora. North's journey to South Africa was among her last, along
with trips to the Seychelles and Chile.
In 1939, Scottish artist and sculptor J.D. Fergusson was
commissioned to write a fully illustrated book on modern Scottish
painting. The Second World War made this difficult and the first
edition of Modern Scottish Painting was published in 1943 without
illustrations. This new edition – edited, introduced and
annotated by Alexander Moffat and Alan Riach – finally brings
Fergusson’s project to fruition, illustrating the argument with
colour reproductions of Fergusson’s own work. Moffat and Riach
frame Fergusson’s important art manifesto for the 21st-century
reader, illuminating his views on modern art as he explores
questions of technique, education, form and what it means for a
painting to be truly modern. Fergusson relates these aspects of
modern painting to Scottishness, showing what they mean for
Scottish identity, nationalism, independence and the legacy that
puritanical Calvinism has left on Scottish art – a particular
concern for Fergusson given his recurring subject matter of the
female nude.
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