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Georg Baselitz's collected writings brings together more than 30
texts by, and interviews with, the artist - spanning the period
1961 to the present - including conversations with Michael Auping,
Henry Geldzahler and Donald Kuspit. Known for his rebellious
approach to Abstract Expressionism, Baselitz here discusses the
impression his paintings convey, the act of painting, his biography
and much more. The texts shift between these personal pieces - some
of which have never before been published in English - to
interviews conducted by a variety of respected critics and art
historians. These conversations present a different voice as
Baselitz responds to careful and critical questions about his work.
A thought-provoking volume on Edvard Munch’s often neglected
pictures of nature, exploring the Norwegian artist’s landscapes,
seascapes, and existential environments in light of his own time
and ours This richly illustrated catalogue provides a multifaceted
perspective on the pictures of nature and landscape by Norwegian
artist Edvard Munch (1863–1944). This important topic has been
neglected in scholarship on Munch, despite the fact that it is a
major motif in his oeuvre. This volume is the first to explore the
theme in its full breadth throughout Munch’s corpus, including
his paintings, lithographs, watercolors, and woodcuts. His
depictions of forests, farmland, and the seashore, as well as
paintings of sea storms, snow, and other extreme weather, present
us with undulating forms that animate nature. They likewise provide
an example of Munch’s preference for liminal spaces where
transformations take place, often celebrating human interaction
with nature in its many manifestations. The book also considers
Munch’s less conventional landscapes, and particularly those
where his famous Scream motif occurs. These environments depict
nature in an existential way, suggesting that the artist held a
deep concern for nature’s destruction by humans—a concern no
less relevant today. A complementary look at his writings as
primary sources alongside his images shows how Munch mixed a
scientific perspective on nature with metaphysical and spiritual
notions of rebirth that permeate other parts of his corpus. The
book also includes a engaging short story by award-winning author
Ali Smith that was inspired by Munch's work. Distributed for
MUNCHÂ Exhibition Schedule: Clark Art Institute,
Williamstown, MA (June 10–October 15, 2023) Museum Barberini,
Potsdam (November 18, 2023–April 1, 2024) Munch Museum, Oslo
(April 27–August 24, 2024)
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Ernst Ludwig Kirchner (Hardcover)
Jill Lloyd, Janis Staggs; Foreword by Ronald S. Lauder, Renee Price; Contributions by Nelson Blitz
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R1,434
R1,055
Discovery Miles 10 550
Save R379 (26%)
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Ships in 12 - 17 working days
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Throughout his career, Ernst Ludwig Kirchner employed a highly
inventive and original use of colour. He favoured novel
applications of paint in unusual matte finishes. For Kirchner,
colour was of primary importance, coupled with technique and style.
He was one of the leading Expressionist painters of the time and
was one of the founding members of the Brucke. In his deeply
personal depictions, he focused on the places where he lived and
worked and his close friends and associates. This book,
accompanying a major exhibition at the Neue Galerie New York,
provides a visual survey of Kirchner's oeuvre and offers an
in-depth analysis of different aspects of the artist's output.
Essays by leading experts examine Kirchner's approach to colour,
his interest in the decorative arts, how electric light affected
his treatment of colour, the impact of Nietzsche on his work, and
how he was profoundly changed by World War I. This book includes
illustrations of nearly 40 paintings, 30 prints, as well as
drawings, sketchbooks, photographs, and decorative work.
An exceptional talent, master of Expressionist art, co-founder of
Die Brücke group. Where Ernst Ludwig Kirchner’s work is
concerned, superlatives are basic. It is all the more surprising,
therefore, that there has been little critical appraisal of one of
the most important chapters in the painter’s life and oeuvre.
Besides his Expressionist acme, his imposing later-phase work
deserves special attention and recognition. In exile in Davos,
Kirchner again managed to produce an outstanding cycle of pictures,
before committing suicide at the age of fifty-eight. Though
continuing to use his inimitable style, he nevertheless invented
something entirely new. Nature appears as an intoxicating space in
intense colours, where the dignity of the human figure is
negotiated in a dynamic aesthetic. The scholarly publication gives
readers the complete picture in the context of another
Expressionist living in a self-imposed exile during those years:
Danish painter J. F. Willumsen (1863–1958). The juxtaposition of
Kirchner and Willumsen poses a visually persuasive and entirely new
perspective on an intense, colourful and vital vision of painting
from the 1910s–1930s.
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