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William Blake (Hardcover)
Martin Myrone, Amy Concannon; Afterword by Alan Moore
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R1,294
R939
Discovery Miles 9 390
Save R355 (27%)
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Out of stock
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An authoritative look at William Blake's life and enduring
relevance as a prophetic artist, poet, and printmaker William Blake
(1757-1827) created some of the most iconic images in the history
of art. He was a countercultural prophet whose personal struggles,
technical innovations, and revelatory vision have inspired
generations of artists. This marvelously illustrated book explores
the biographical, artistic, and political contexts that shaped
Blake's work, and demonstrates why he was a singularly gifted
visual artist with renewed relevance for us today. The book
explores Blake's relationship with the art world of his time and
provides new perspectives on his craft as a printmaker, poet,
watercolorist, and painter. It makes sense of the profound
historical forces with which he contended during his lifetime, from
revolutions in America and France to the dehumanizing effects of
industrialization. Readers gain incomparable insights into Blake's
desire for recognition and commercial success, his role as social
critic, his visionary experience of London, his hatred of empire,
and the bitter disappointments that drove him to retire from the
world in his final years. What emerges is a luminous portrait of a
complicated and uncompromising artist who was at once a heretic,
mystic, saint, and cynic. With an afterword by Alan Moore, this
handsome volume features many of the most sublime and exhilarating
images Blake ever produced. It brings together watercolors,
paintings, and prints, and draws from such illuminated masterpieces
as Songs of Innocence and of Experience, Europe a Prophecy, and
apocalyptic works such as Milton and Jerusalem. Published in
association with Tate Exhibition Schedule Tate Britain, London
September 11, 2019-February 2, 2020
A landmark new presentation of the work of J.M.W. Turner,
repositioning the great painter as a pioneering chronicler of
contemporary life, and exploring what it really means to be a
modern artist. J.M.W. Turner's career spanned revolution and the
Napoleonic War, Empire, the explosion of finance capitalism, the
transition from sail to steam and from manpower to mechanisation,
political reform and scientific and cultural advances that
transformed society and shaped the modern world. While historians
have long recognised that the industrial and political revolutions
of the late eighteenth century inaugurated far reaching change and
modernisation, these were often ignored by artists as they did not
fit into established categories of pictorial representation. This
extraordinary new publication shows Turner updating the language of
art and transforming his style and practice to produce revelatory,
definitive interpretations of modern subjects. This is J.M.W.
Turner as he has never been seen before.
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