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The Pearl (Paperback, [New Ed.]): John Steinbeck The Pearl (Paperback, [New Ed.])
John Steinbeck; Illustrated by Jose Clemente Orozco 1
R250 R231 Discovery Miles 2 310 Save R19 (8%) Ships in 5 - 10 working days

The Pearl is John Steinbeck's flawless parable about wealth and the evil it can bring. When Kino, a Mexican pearl-diver finds 'the Pearl of the World' he believes that his impoverished life will be magically transformed. He will marry Juana in the church and their son, Coyotito, will go to school. Obsessed by his dream, Kino is blind to the greed, fear and even violence the pearl arouses in his neighbours - and in himself.

Written with haunting and lyrical simplicity, The Pearl sets the values of the civilized world against those of the primitive and finds them tragically inadequate.

The Pearl (Paperback): John Steinbeck The Pearl (Paperback)
John Steinbeck; Illustrated by Jose Clemente Orozco 1
R349 R320 Discovery Miles 3 200 Save R29 (8%) Ships in 10 - 15 working days

The Pearl is John Steinbeck's flawless parable about wealth and the evil it can bring. When Kino, a Mexican pearl-diver finds 'the Pearl of the World' he believes that his impoverished life will be magically transformed. He will marry Juana in the church and their son, Coyotito, will go to school. Obsessed by his dream, Kino is blind to the greed, fear and even violence the pearl arouses in his neighbours - and in himself.

Written with haunting and lyrical simplicity, The Pearl sets the values of the civilized world against those of the primitive and finds them tragically inadequate.

Jose Clemente Orozco - An Autobiography (Paperback): Jose Clemente Orozco Jose Clemente Orozco - An Autobiography (Paperback)
Jose Clemente Orozco; Translated by Robert C. Stephenson; Introduction by John Palmer Leeper
R511 Discovery Miles 5 110 Ships in 12 - 19 working days

The artistic eminence of Jose Clemente Orozco (1883-1949) is such that he has been called "the greatest painter the Americas have produced." In his Autobiography he also attains literary distinction. He is a writer who recounts the history of his period from a personal point of view and yet scarcely mentions himself. He is an observer who writes about the history of his country and of his country's art, yet makes his own character implicit in the narrative. The character that emerges is charming. It is that of a man strong but retiring, sharply critical of what he disapproves yet generous in praise of what he admires, decided in his views but modest in his assumptions and given to understatement in describing his own activities, averse to war and political struggle yet eager for conflict of ideas, always dedicated to the welfare of humanity. Through the details of day-by-day living, he presents the panorama of the Mexican Revolution and of events in other parts of the world to which he traveled. His is a personal story of the Revolution, giving his reactions (as those of any common man) to the barbarities of war: "Insolent leaders, inflamed with alcohol, taking whatever they wanted at pistol point. . . . By night in dark streets the sound of gunplay, followed by screams, blasphemies, and vile insults. Breaking windows, sharp blows, cries of pain, and shots again." Orozco's ability, as a painter, to see the details and to sense the mood of a place is apparent in his word pictures of the places he visited: "After six in the evening Paris is an immense brothel." "London was like the seat of a noble family which had been exceedingly rich but had lost its fortune." "Old, old Montmartre [is] a moldering cadaver . . ." Orozco also makes some penetrating observations on art itself. Although he emphasizes individuality and freedom from tradition in art, he abhors unschooled art, especially such extremes as primitive Impressionism and other groups that lack instruction in the general principles of art, in technique, in theory of color, in perspective. He says ironically of the artistically uneducated: "Blessed are the ignorant and the imbecile, for theirs is the supreme glory of art! Blessed are the idiots and the cretins, for masterpieces of painting shall issue from their hands!" Orozco believes in education, not only for the artists but for their public. Taste in art can come only through understanding of the purpose and the techniques of art-through knowledge. Without training, public taste "mostly likes sugar, honey, and candy. Diabetic art. The greater the amount of sugar, the greater the-commercial-success."

The Artist in New York - Letters to Jean Charlot and unpublished writings, 1925-1929. (Paperback): Jose Clemente Orozco The Artist in New York - Letters to Jean Charlot and unpublished writings, 1925-1929. (Paperback)
Jose Clemente Orozco; Translated by Ruth L. C. Simms
R786 Discovery Miles 7 860 Ships in 10 - 15 working days

In his Foreword to this edition, Jean Charlot says: "An unusual feature of Orozco's letters is the great deal that he has to say about art. That one artist writing to another would emphasize art as his subject seems normal enough to the American reader. Yet, within the context of the Mexico of those days, the fact remains exceptional. The patria Orozco was leaving behind had, even from the point of view of its artists, many cares more pressing than art."

The letters and unpublished writings of Orozco from this period (1925-1929) describe an important period of transition in the artist's life, from his departure from Mexico, almost as a defeated man, to the period just before he received the great mural commissions--Pomona, The New School for Social Research in New York, Dartmouth--that were to bring him lasting international fame.

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