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Andrey Tarkovsky was the most important Russian filmmaker of the
post-war era, and one of the world's most renowned cinematic
geniuses. He directed the first five of his seven films - Ivan's
Childhood, Andrei Rublev, Solaris, Mirror and Stalker - in the
Soviet Union, but in 1982 defected to Italy, where he made
Nostalgia. His final film, The Sacrifice, was produced in Sweden in
1985. Tarkovsky's films are characterized by metaphysical themes,
extended takes, an absence of conventional dramatical structure and
plot, and a dream-like, visionary style of cinematography. They
achieve a spiritual intensity and transcendent beauty that many
consider to be without parallel. This book presents extended
sequences of stills from each of the films alongside synopses and
cast and crew listings. It includes reflections on Tarkovsky's work
from fellow artists and writers including Jean-Paul Sartre and
Ingmar Bergman, for whom Tarkovsky was 'the greatest, the one who
invented a new language.' Extracts from Tarkovsky's own writings
and diaries offer a wealth of insights into his poetic and
philosophical views on cinematography, which he described as
'sculpting in time'. The book also reproduces many personal
Polaroid photographs that confirm the extraordinary poetic vision
of a great artist who died aged only 54, but who remains a potent
influence on artists and filmmakers today.
Subject to passionate controversy during his lifetime, the work of
Joseph Beuys is now considered one of the most significant and
influential contributions to twentieth-century fine arts. This book
provides a survey of Beuys's oeuvre, which he viewed as part of a
larger, philosophically based practice emphasising direct
democracy, free access to education and the restructuring of
society to meet ecological requirements. A total of 152 works from
Beuys's many fields of activity - drawings and watercolours, prints
and multiples, sculpture and objects, spaces and actions - are
arranged in chronological order, demonstrating the artist's formal
versatility, creative richness and conceptual depth. The peculiar
poetry of the materials Beuys used - felt, grease, honey, wax,
copper and sulfur - emerges along with the gentle melancholy
suffusing the work of this sensitive agent provocateur. Alain Borer
analyses Beuys's motivation with special reference to the artist's
written and spoken statements. The book is an informed introduction
to the artistic work and conceptual world of Joseph Beuys, for
anyone interested in art.
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