|
Showing 1 - 7 of
7 matches in All Departments
This volume presents three of Meyer Schapiro's finest essays on
Pablo Picasso (1881-1973). Given that we esteem artists whose work
epitomizes particular styles, how can we likewise value Picasso, an
artist who demonstrates a wide range of artistic styles? In his
first essay, The Unity of Picasso's Art, Schapiro dismantles this
apparent paradox by finding unity through hidden associations among
seemingly disparate works and unsuspected ties to Picasso's
personal experiences. In Einstein and Cubism: Science and Art,
Schapiro investigates potential connections between the two most
important radical innovations in science and art of the early 20th
century: Einstein's 1905 Theory of Relativity and Braque and
Picasso's Cubism at the end of the same decade. Schapiro uses the
assumed relationship between the two to analyse the classic themes
of space, time and movement in art, celebrating the innovations of
both Relativity and Cubism as models of the searching, questioning
mind, in short, of freedom of thought. In the final essay, Schapiro
shows that Guernica, although the greatest political work of art of
the 20th century, nevertheless embodied many of Picasso's artistic
and personal obessions. This book offers comprehensive analysis of
the 20th century's most prolific artist - Pablo Picasso. It will
appeal to all those who have followed Picasso's career and to those
intrigued by the multi-faceted connections between art and social
changes.
|
Arshile Gorky (Hardcover)
Ethel Schwabacher; Foreword by Lloyd Goodrich; Introduction by Meyer Schapiro
|
R1,044
Discovery Miles 10 440
|
Ships in 10 - 15 working days
|
Study Of This Important American Painter By One Of His Students.
|
Arshile Gorky (Paperback)
Ethel Schwabacher; Foreword by Lloyd Goodrich; Introduction by Meyer Schapiro
|
R711
Discovery Miles 7 110
|
Ships in 10 - 15 working days
|
Study Of This Important American Painter By One Of His Students.
Meyer Schapiro (1904-96), renowned for his critical essays on
nineteenth- and twentieth-century painting, also played a decisive
role as a young scholar in defining the style of art and
architecture known as Romanesque. And, appropriately, when he was
invited to deliver the prestigious Charles Eliot Norton Lectures at
Harvard, he chose Romanesque architectural sculpture as his topic.
These lectures, acclaimed for the verve and freshness with which
Schapiro delivered them, languished unpublished for decades. But
Linda Seidel, who knew Schapiro well and attended the 1967
lectures, has now expertly transcribed and edited them, presenting
them for the first time to an audience beyond the halls of Harvard.
In editing the lectures, Seidel closely followed the recordings of
the originals. Sentences are rendered as Schapiro spoke them,
affording readers a unique opportunity to experience the legendary
teacher as he rarely appears in print: forming his thoughts
spontaneously, interrupting himself to develop related ideas, and
responding to the audience's interests by introducing humorous
asides. Nonetheless, these lectures are carefully constructed,
demonstrating Schapiro's commitment to the originality and value of
artistic production and affirming his lifelong belief in artists'
engagement with their cultures. Amply illustrated with many key
works and augmented with Seidel's indispensable introduction, this
long-awaited volume will delight students and scholars of art
history, as well as anyone interested in seeing a new side of a
profoundly influential mind.
|
|