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Grayson Perry - Smash Hits
Grayson Perry, Victoria Coren Mitchell, Patrick Elliott, Tor Scott
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R560
Discovery Miles 5 600
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Ships in 12 - 17 working days
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Grayson Perry is one of Britain’s most celebrated contemporary
artists and cultural figures. This book, which includes first sight
of new and previously unpublished works, is published to accompany
the largest-ever retrospective of Perry’s art. It offers a
vibrant insight into his life and work, from his youth in rural
Essex to sell-out stage shows at the Royal Albert Hall. Grayson
Perry vividly reflects on his art, life and career, remembering the
sources of inspiration and influences along the way. Victoria Coren
Mitchell’s thought-provoking contribution considers the role of
humour in Perry’s art, highlighting the often-underestimated
effort involved in being at once a serious artist and a lovable
character. Patrick Elliott provides an illuminating biographical
essay of the artist. The reader is also given a fascinating glimpse
into the technique and process behind Perry’s prints, pots and
tapestries. Showcasing 76 exhibited works, the book covers the full
range and breadth of his astonishing career.
Joan Eardley (1921-1963) is one of Scotland's most admired artists.
During a career that lasted barely fifteen years, she concentrated
on two very distinct themes: children in the Townhead area of
central Glasgow, and the fishing village of Catterline, just south
of Aberdeen, with its leaden skies and wild sea. The contrast
between this urban and rural subject matter is self-evident, but
the two are not, at heart, so very different. Townhead and
Catterline were home to tight-knit communities, living under
extreme pressure: Townhead suffered from overcrowding and poverty,
and Catterline from depopulation brought about by the declining
fishing industry. Eardley was inspired by the humanity she found in
both places. These two intertwining strands are the focus of this
book, which looks in detail at Eardley's working processes. Her
method can be traced from rough sketches and photographs through to
pastel drawings and large oil paintings. Identifying many of
Eardley's subjects and drawing on unpublished letters, archival
records and interviews, the authors provide a new and remarkably
detailed account of Eardley's life and art.
In 1951, Joan Eardley visited the coastal fishing village of
Catterline in north-east Scotland for the first time. Her visit
sparked a fascination that would last the rest of her life. She
made the village her home and found inspiration in the dramatic
light and rapidly changing weather. The gentle landscapes and wild
rolling seascapes she painted of Catterline in wind, snow, rain and
sun are among her best-loved works. Unpublished archival material
and interviews with many of those who knew her shed new light on
Eardley's life in Catterline. A vivid portrait is painted both of
Eardley and of the village, showing the vital part Catterline
played in her development as an artist. The story of her
experiences on the wild Scottish coast is evocatively told and
beautifully illustrated with some of her most remarkable drawings
and paintings.
This is the exceptionally rich story of Rembrandt’s fame and
influence in Britain. No other nation has witnessed such a
passionate – and sometimes eccentric – craziness for
Rembrandt’s works. His imagery has become ubiquitous, making him
one of the most recognised artists in history. In this book, the
world’s leading experts reveal how the taste for Rembrandt’s
paintings, drawings and prints evolved, growing into a mania that
gripped collectors and art lovers across the country. This reached
a fever pitch in the late 1700s, before the dawn of a new century
ushered in a re-evaluation of Rembrandt’s reputation and
opportunities for the wider public to see his masterpieces for
themselves. The story of Rembrandt’s profound and inspirational
impact on the British imagination is illustrated by over 130 lavish
paintings and drawings by the master himself, as well as by some of
Britain’s best-loved artists, including William Hogarth, James
Abbott McNeill Whistler, Eduardo Paolozzi and John Bellany.
Collage is one of the most popular and pervasive of all art-forms,
yet this is the first historical survey book ever published on the
subject. Featuring over 200 works, ranging from the 1500s to the
present day, it offers an entirely new approach. Hitherto, collage
has been presented as a twentieth-century phenomenon, linked in
particular to Pablo Picasso and Cubism in the years just before the
First World War. In Cut and Paste: 400 Years of Collage, we trace
its origins back to books and prints of the 1500s, through to the
boom in popularity of scrapbooks and do-it-yourself collage during
the Victorian period, and then through Cubism, Futurism, Dada and
Surrealism. Collage became the technique of choice in the 1960s and
1970s for anti-establishment protest, and in the present day is
used by millions of us through digital devices. The definition of
collage employed here is a broad one, encompassing cut-and-pasted
paper, photography, patchwork, film and digital technology and
ranging from work by professionals to unknown makers, amateurs and
children. Published to accompany an exhibition at the National
Gallery of Scotland, June-October 2019.
British realist art of the 1920s and 1930s is visually stunning -
strong, seductive and demonstrating extraordinary technical skill.
Despite this, it is often overshadowed by abstract art. This book
presents the very first overview of British realist painting of the
period, showcasing outstanding works from private and public
collections across the UK. Of the forty artists featured in the
show, many were major figures in the 1920s and 1930s but later
passed out of fashion as abstraction and Pop Art became the
dominant trends in the post-war years. In the last decade their
work has re-emerged and interest in them has grown. Interwar
realist art embraces a number of different styles, but is
characterised by fine drawing, meticulous craftsmanship, a tendency
towards classicism and an aversion to impressionism and visible
brushwork. Artists such as Gerald Leslie Brockhurst, Meredith
Frampton, James Cowie and Winifred Knights combine fastidious Old
Master detail with 1920s modernity. Stanley Spencer spans various
camps while Lucian Freud's early work can be seen as a realist coda
which continued into the 1940s and beyond.Featuring many Scottish
and women artists, this book promises a fascinating insight into
this captivating period of British art. Exhibition to be held at
the Scottish National Gallery of Modern Art, Edinburgh from 1 July
to 29 October 2017.
Auguste Rodin is still justifiably recognized today as not only one
of the greatest sculptors of all time, but also the father of
modern sculpture. His monument to the "Burghers of Calais" is one
of the best-known public sculptures in the world. So much so that
Edward Horswell decided to curate an exhibition dedicated to the
burghers in 2015. Having spent more than 10 years building one
complete set, the Sladmore was fortunate to secure a second, which,
coupled with the gallery's current stock holding of burghers and
related works, created a most informative exhibition: several
examples of the same sculpture could be viewed together, affording
rich comparisons. In this beautifully illustrated publication,
Horswell explains how the monument came to fruition and looks at
the casting history of the 50 separate works Rodin made on this
subject and focusing on the five reductions made between 1895 and
1903. It also includes an essay by Patrick Elliott, Senior Curator
at the Scottish National Gallery of Modern Art in Edinburgh, which
looks at the monument and its influence on sculpture and sculptors
from its first unveiling in 1895 to today.
Raqib Shaw is one of the most extraordinary and sought-after
artists working in the world today. Born in Calcutta in 1974 and
raised in Kashmir, he came to London to study in 1998 and has lived
there ever since. Inspired by a broad range of influences,
including the old masters, Indian miniatures, Persian carpets and
the Pre-Raphaelites, his paintings are infused with memories and
longing for his homeland in Kashmir. His technique constitutes a
completely unique kind of enamel painting. Spending months on
preparatory drawings, tracings and photographic studies, he then
transfers the composition onto prepared wooden panels, establishing
an intricate design with acrylic liner, which leaves a slightly
raised line. He adds the enamel paint using needle-fine syringes
and a porcupine quill, with which he manoeuvres the paint. The
finished works are intricate, magical and breathtaking in their
colour and complexity. This book accompanies an exhibition of eight
paintings by Raqib Shaw at the Scottish National Gallery of Modern
Art, alongside two paintings which have long obsessed him and have
influenced specific works: Sir Joseph Noel Paton's The Quarrel of
Oberon and Titania, 1849 (National Gallery of Scotland) and Lucas
Cranach's An Allegory of Melancholy, 1528 (private collection). The
book includes the first full-length biographical study of the
artist.
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