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Cv/VAR series 152 publishes an anthology of essays and reviews by
the eminent art historian and writer, Edward Lucie-Smith. The
articles cover a broad span, from the Italian Renaissance of Giotto
and Antonello da Messina, Leonardo and Michelangelo, progressing to
Rubens, Velazquez and Ingres, with essays on William Hogarth, John
Constable and John Everett Millais for British Art. With the
experience of his landmark publications on modern art, which remain
in print; the author sweeps the reader on a fabulous journey of
perception, disclosing the strands that bind the continuum of
classic and contemporary art.
Explores the development of the Pre-Raphaelite movement in the mid
19th century; and works which figure amongst the most lasting and
generally propular in British art. Renowned writer and art critic
Edward Lucie-Smith contributes a study of the individual artists,
their interconnection and previously unpublished material of their
intricate links with the social establishment of the time. James
Cahill has a special interest in the movement, having studied Dante
Gabriel Rosetti and Holman Hunt. He reviews the major exhibition of
150 works at Tate Britain launched in September 2012. 'I think what
I want to do is to follow a trail that leads, through many twists
and turns, from the religious revival of the early 19th century to
Blue Period Picasso, then to Surrealism. It may take in the
Children of the Raj and the discovery of Japan along the way. It
leads from rather rigid moralism, to conscious immoralism, and then
at last to Freud/Dali.' Edward Lucie-Smith 05/2012
In this book Edward Lucie-Smith considers the achievement of John
Singer Sargent in response to a new exhibition at the National
Portrait Gallery in London. This exhibition features Sargent's more
private works - images of friends, rather than portraits painted on
commission. In many ways Sargent is an ambiguous figure. The child
of wealthy expatriate American parents, he was brought up in
Europe, at first made his career in France, then settled in
Britain. Totally cosmopolitan, he kept his American nationality,
painted many American sitters, but never lived for any extended
period of time in the United States, either as a child or as an
adult. During his time in France he consorted with a number of
artists who, at a certain point in their careers, were thought of
as cutting edge. Monet is a prime example. However, his more
intimate artist friends, such as Helleu, whom he painted a number
of times, were not radicals, and always second-or-third rankers.
Sexually he is a mystery. Biographers have tended to classify him
according to their own sexual preferences, rather like the
biographers of Caravaggio. For some he was a closeted gay man, for
others he was definitely a lover of women. He never married and
there is no proof of any liaisons, either heterosexual or
homosexual. Paintings of subjects from his own social circle, made
for his own pleasure rather than on commission, suggest that while
he liked handsome young men, he was also fascinated by women of
dominant temperament. His own mother was apparently a woman of this
type. Easily social with friends, he nevertheless fiercely guarded
his essential privacy. There is a parallel here with his somewhat
older contemporary Lord Leighton, another hugely successful
bachelor artist. Both men were strikingly masculine in appearance.
In terms of his later reputation, Sargent was long regarded as a
paradigmatic example of an artist who was immensely skilful but in
no way truly experimental - someone who fitted perfectly into the
wealthy society of his time. The reconsideration of Sargent that is
now taking place has parallels with the reconsideration of Gustav
Klimt, which got its start a little earlier. Neither one of them
can really be described as 'avant-garde' in any meaningful sense of
that much-abused term, but we have now started to see them as being
extremely significant as makers of images that somehow sum up their
epoch without sacrifice of aesthetic quality. Their paintings still
resonate with the contemporary audience today.
In this study 'Art, Poetry and WW1, by Edward Lucue-Smith of
writing, poetry and painting In the Centenary Year of the outbreak
of the First World War the author considers the historical impact
on the general psyche of the calamitous events, reflected in the
expression of poets and visual artists. The volume includes Eric
Kennington, CRW Nevinson, John Singer Sargent, William Orpen,
Stanley Spencer and Paul Nash; and writers Siegfried Sassoon, Isaac
Rosenberg, Wilfred Owen, Edward Thomas and T.S. Eliot. In Europe
the painters: Otto Dix, Max Beckman, Franz Marc, Gino Severini,
Ernst Ludwig Kirchner, Ludwig Meidner. He establishes a continuity
to the theme with reference to works by Velazquez, Watteau, Goya
and others, in their treatment of the spectacle of battle and the
horrors of human conflict.
An anthology of essays and reviews by the eminent art historian and
writer, Edward Lucie-Smith. The articles cover a broad span, from
the Italian Renaissance of Giotto and Antonello da Messina,
Leonardo and Michelangelo, progressing to Rubens, Velazquez and
Ingres, with essays on William Hogarth, John Constable and John
Everett Millais for British Art. With the experience of his
landmark publications on modern art, which remain in print; the
author sweeps the reader on a fabulous journey of perception,
disclosing the strands that bind the continuum of classic and
contemporary art.
A history of the development of the art market spanning the 17th
century to contemporary art today.In modern times the profession of
the dealer had its start in the late fifteenth or early sixteenth
centuries and was essentially due to the revolution brought about
by the invention of the printing press. Prints could be offered as
readymade images to a widespread market. Durer said he made more
money out of his prints, more easily than he did from his
commissioned paintings. His mother was his dealer, offering them in
the marketplace at Nuremberg.With the rise and expansion of
mercantile capitalism the sale of readymade works, supplied by
third parties, not directly commissioned from the artist himself
nor directly specified by the ultimate client, became a more and
more common form of trading in art. This was particularly the
pattern in the Low Countries and it also helped to sustain the
increasingly large community of foreign artists, Netherlandish and
German, who made their way to Italy, where they had no immediate
social connections and needed intermediaries in order to make a
livelihood. These intermediaries undoubtedly encouraged artists to
tackle subject matter they believed would sell.By the early 18th
century the profession of art dealer was well-established, in
opposition to the official academies. Watteau's painting L'Enseigne
de Gersaint portrays an upmarket Parisian establishment of this
type. It is perhaps no accident that it shows a portrait of the
reigning French monarch, Louis XV, being unceremoniously packed
away in a box. Emblems of power now counted for less that symbols
of luxury. A large mirror propped up on the right suggests that
little distinction needed to be made, in this context, between
paintings and looking glasses. Both were furnishings, the essential
trappings of a civilized life-style, and both served to display not
only their possessors' taste, but also their wealth. The big
mirror, in fact, may have been more valuable than any of the
paintings crowding the walls.The French Revolution and the
Napoleonic Wars that followed it saw a radical redistribution of
art works. Naturally dealers played a large part in this - also in
defining what was prestigious, therefore saleable, and what was
not. In the Victorian period in London, as attention swung towards
then contemporary creations, dealers such as the still surviving
Fine Art Society (founded in 1877) played a major role in shaping
taste. The history of this gallery in Bond Street and that of the
late 19th century Aesthetic Movement are closely intertwined.In
late 19th century, dealers such as Durand-Ruel (in this case
through his support of the Impressionists) were increasingly
important in changing the currents of taste. In Durand-Ruel's case,
his influence became international. This went hand in hand with a
different kind of international influence, exercised by the great
British dealer Lord Duveen, In alliance with the art historian
Bernard Berenson, Duveen devised a way of selling Old Master
paintings, often of religious or esoteric mythological subjects, to
a clientele who had little natural liking for that kind of
subject-matter, by emphasizing the formal qualities of these works,
rather than what they portrayed. This was a first step towards the
acceptance of abstraction in art.As the Modern Movement progressed
dealers such as Vollard and Paul Guilluame had a greater and
greater say in defining what was important in contemporary art and
what was not. This influence continued as the centre of avant-garde
activity moved from Paris to New York. Galleries such as that of
Pierre Matisse and Peggy Gugenheim's Art of This Century Gallery
pioneered the way to the acceptance of new forms of artistic
expression. Later, Leo Castelli, an immigrant from the cosmopolitan
Italian city of Trieste, was instrumental in establishing the
reputations of Jasper Johns and Roy Lichtenstein. Castelli's 1962
solo show for Lichtenstein was a major step in the worldwide
success of Pop art.This pattern continues today, on an even more
ambitious and global scale. Galleries such as Gagosian (with
multiple international sites) and White Cube here in London play a
major part in creating contemporary perceptions about what is and
is not important in art.
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Tom of Finland XXL (English, French, German, Hardcover, Multilingual edition)
John Waters, Camille Paglia, Todd Oldham, Armistead Maupin, Edward Lucie-Smith; Edited by …
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In 1998, TASCHEN introduced the world to the masterful art of Touko
Laaksonen with The Art of Pleasure. Prior to that, Laaksonen,
better known as Tom of Finland, enjoyed an intense cult following
in the international gay community but was largely unknown to a
broader audience. In 2009, TASCHEN followed up with the ultimate
Tom overview: Tom of Finland XXL, a beautiful big collector's
edition with over 1,000 images, covering six decades of the
artist's career. The work was gathered from collections across the
United States and Europe with the help of the Tom of Finland
Foundation, featuring many drawings, paintings, and sketches never
previously reproduced. Other images had only been seen out of
context and were finally presented in the sequential order Tom
intended for full artistic appreciation and erotic impact. The
elegant oversized volume showed the full range of Tom's talent,
from sensitive portraits to frank sexual pleasure to tender
expressions of love and haunting tributes to young men struck down
by AIDS, and was completed by eight commissioned essays on Tom's
social and personal impact by Camille Paglia, John Waters,
Armistead Maupin, Todd Oldham, and others, plus a scholarly
analysis of individual drawings by art historian Edward
Lucie-Smith. The only thing missing from Tom of Finland XXL was a
widely affordable price tag-until now. The new Tom of Finland XXL
is still big enough to work your biceps, and includes all of the
original content, but costs a fraction of the original price.
You're welcome.
There is surprisingly little, and certainly nothing comprehensive,
written about the contemporary Russian scene now. What appear in
the West are mostly reports about so-called 'dissidents', not about
what is happening in this vast culture, taken as a whole. Too
often, these reports seem to be primarily inspired by a desire to
demonstrate Western cultural and political superiority. The aim of
Russian Art in the New Millennium is not to support any one cause,
but to look at the situation as it now exists objectively and to
give as wide and truthful a view as possible. Russian art during
the period under review - the last two decades - has been evolving
rapidly and in many directions. Hence there are sections on digital
art, landscape paintings, graffiti, religious art and others.
Furthermore, in addition to the continuing influence of the
traditional centres for art - Moscow and St Petersburg - a number
of provincial Russian cities have developed distinctive art worlds
of their own. Russian Art in the New Millennium attempts to
discover this terra incognita and to encompass this extremely
various, but also intensely national art scene in Russia in one
volume.
Moral thinking today finds itself stranded between the particular
and the universal. Alasdair MacIntyre's work on narrative,
discussed here along with that of Stanley Hauerwas and H. T.
Engelhardt, aims to undo the perceived damage done by the
Enlightenment by returning to narrative and abandoning the illusion
of a disembodied reason that claims to be able to give a coherent
explanation for everything. It is precisely this - a theory that
holds good for all cases - that John Rawls proposed, drawing on the
heritage of Emmanuel Kant. Who is right? Must universality be
abandoned? Must we only think about morality in terms that are
relative, bound by space and time? Alexander Lucie-Smith attempts
to answer these questions by examining the nature of narrative
itself as well as the particular narratives of Rawls and St
Augustine. Bound and rooted as they are in history and personal
experience, narratives nevertheless strain at the limits imposed on
them. It is Lucie-Smith's contention that each narrative that
points to a lived morality exists against the background of an
infinite horizon, and thus it is that the particular and the rooted
can also make us aware of the universal and unchanging.
This standard introduction to visual art since 1945 has been
revised, updated and redesigned for the first time since 2001.
Movements, trends and individual artists from abstract
expressionism to the present day are summarized, with detailed
coverage of major developments such as pop art, conceptual and
performance work, minimal art, neo-expressionist and figurative
painting, the YBAs and the globalized art scene of the twenty-first
century. A new chapter on art since 2000 includes discussion of
work by Banksy and Ai Weiwei, as well as recent trends in art from
Russia and Eastern Europe. Writing with exceptional clarity and a
strong sense of narrative, Edward Lucie-Smith demystifies the work
of dozens of artists, revealing how the art world has interacted
with social, political and environmental concerns. Nearly 300
images of key artworks range from the paintings of Jackson Pollock
via graffiti from 1980s New York and land art of the 1970s to
contemporary painting from China and video from Japan. The book is
as global in its reach as art has become in the 21st century.
In this classic survey, now updated and with full-colour images
throughout, Edward Lucie-Smith introduces the art of Latin America
from 1900 to the present day. He discusses in detail major figures
such as Diego Rivera and Frida Kahlo, as well as dozens of less
well-known artists. Those who spent their lives in exile, and
artists from Europe and the US who lived in South America, such as
Leonora Carrington, are all included in this broad, comprehensive
view. The artists featured here have sought for indigenous roots
and a local tradition; explored abstraction, expressionism and new
media (video, installation, performance); entered dialogue with
European and North American movements, while insisting on reaching
a wide popular audience for their work; and created an energetic,
innovative and very varied art scene across the continent today. A
new chapter extends the discussion into the twenty-first century,
summarizing key trends and most notable figures of the last two
decades. A constant theme is the embrace of the experimental and
the new by artists across Latin America.
As London evolves into a Babylonian-style city of lofty towers, the
artist Anna Keen has been inspired to paint this London
Metamorphosis. While each new edifice heads to the heavens, the
exposed entrails of these vast construction sites strangely
resemble ruins. Her large canvases are enriched with details
stemming from patient observation and on-the-spot sketches, and
from voyages around the city made by helicopter, boat, road and on
foot. Like the eighteenth-century artist J.M Gandy, who
simultaneously painted London in ruins and in construction, Anna
Keen takes us just beneath the surface of the metropolis, to where
the emotional landscape lurks and to where the soul of London is
heading. London-based art historian Edward Lucie-Smith has followed
Anna Keen's painting since 1995 in Rome.
Moral thinking today finds itself stranded between the particular
and the universal. Alasdair MacIntyre's work on narrative,
discussed here along with that of Stanley Hauerwas and H. T.
Engelhardt, aims to undo the perceived damage done by the
Enlightenment by returning to narrative and abandoning the illusion
of a disembodied reason that claims to be able to give a coherent
explanation for everything. It is precisely this - a theory that
holds good for all cases - that John Rawls proposed, drawing on the
heritage of Emmanuel Kant. Who is right? Must universality be
abandoned? Must we only think about morality in terms that are
relative, bound by space and time? Alexander Lucie-Smith attempts
to answer these questions by examining the nature of narrative
itself as well as the particular narratives of Rawls and St
Augustine. Bound and rooted as they are in history and personal
experience, narratives nevertheless strain at the limits imposed on
them. It is Lucie-Smith's contention that each narrative that
points to a lived morality exists against the background of an
infinite horizon, and thus it is that the particular and the rooted
can also make us aware of the universal and unchanging.
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