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David Hockney's continuing belief in the importance of the portrait
and his virtuoso skill in creating a sense of close communication
between artist, sitter and viewer has resulted in some of the
best-loved works of the postwar era. From the 1950s on, Hockney's
most persistent subject matter, in paintings, drawings, collages
and photoworks, has been of people usually very close to him, as
well as of himself. These works are narratives of autobiographical
relationships: they reflect the intimate and often intense stories
of this artist's life. They also explore different formal ways of
representing the passage of time and at the same time the
unavoidable but marvellous stillness of portraits. The works
include fascinating sequences as he paints his mother or Henry
Geldzahler or Celia Birtwell on and off for decades; the special
qualities attached to depictions of lovers; and the range of
celebrities, writers and artists - Billy Wilder, Armistead Maupin,
W.H. Auden, Henry Moore, Christopher Isherwood - who have been part
of a very full life. The text by a distinguished European critic
and curator reinforces the point that this hugely popular
English-born artist, who made America his second home, has become a
figure of worldwide appeal.
Citrus fruits with empty oyster shells, chicken eggs stamped with
best-before dates and unmoving nudes in empty spaces: Inspired by
seventeenth-century painting, Pavel Feinstein transposes artistic
traditions to the present day, toys with the viewer's perceptions
and sometimes even blurs the boundaries between the painter and the
model. This publication is dedicated to the still lifes and nudes
of an artist born in Moscow with Jewish roots, who emigrated to
Germany in 1980 and now works in Berlin. Pavel Feinstein's painting
style is unmistakeable. A grey, undefined background underpins a
pictorial subject, one or several objects, carefully arranged and
sensuously captured. Although his work may inevitably bring to mind
the compositions of earlier colleagues, such as Cezanne, Manet or
Van Gogh, Feinstein's work is characterised by additional elements:
He transposes desirable objects into austere spaces and imbues his
ensembles with a mysterious, melancholy air through purposeful
composition. In collaboration with Galerie Kiefer this volume
presents works of art created by the artist, who decides "what
stays and what goes" as he paints, between 2013 and 2015.
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Nadine Gordimer
Paperback
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R398
R369
Discovery Miles 3 690
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