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Stass Paraskos (Paperback)
Michael Paraskos; David Haste, Norbert Lynton
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R370
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A collection of essays to celebrate the seventy-fifth birthday of
the artist Stass Paraskos. Born into a peasant family in Cyprus in
1933, Paraskos went to England to work as a waiter in a Greek
restaurant. There he met a group of artists from Leeds College of
Art who persuaded him to join their college. Paraskos never looked
back, going on to be a celebrated artist and educator. He became
Head of Painting at the University for Creative Arts, and founder
of the Cyprus College of Art, the first art college in his homeland
of Cyprus. This book places Paraskos in context and deals with
major events in his life, including the notorious trial in Leeds,
in 1966, when he was prosecuted for obscenity following an
exhibition of his paintings.
Stass Paraskos is an artist who has been a major influence on
generations of art students. From the 1960s to the 1980s he taught
at some of the most innovative art schools in Britain, including
Leeds College of Art, De Montfort University and the University for
Creative Arts. In the 1990s he developed the Cyprus College of Art
into a creative meeting point for artists and art students from
around the world, turning it into what the art historian Ben Read
has called Europe's answer to Black Mountain College in the United
States. Yet Paraskos was not born into the art world. His family
were poor peasant farmers in Cyprus. When he came to England in the
1950s it was to work as a cook in one of the new Greek restaurants
becoming popular at the time. In this book Norbert Lynton tells the
story of Paraskos's development as an artist and appraises his
work. As well as becoming a significant teacher in Britain,
Paraskos remains the only Cypriot artist to have work in London's
Tate Gallery, and his lyrical style of painting has been exhibited
around the world. Lynton also tells the story of the notorious
Paraskos Trial which turned Paraskos into an international
celebrity. In 1966, Paraskos was prosecuted for obscenity by the
British police for an exhibition of his work held in Leeds. Along
with Lynton, other luminaries from the art world spoke in favour of
Paraskos, including Herbert Read and Quentin Bell. Even the
Government Minister Roy Jenkins, then Home Secretary, spoke out
against the prosecution. But despite this the case was lost and
Paraskos became famous as the last artist in Britain to be
successfully prosecuted for obscenity under the Vagrancy Act of
1832.
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