|
Showing 1 - 8 of
8 matches in All Departments
A major new survey that offers fresh insights on Pablo Picasso's
artworks, written by a leading authority on the master. Pablo
Picasso (1881-1973) was one of the greatest artists of the 20th
century. This important new monograph, released to coincide with
the fiftieth anniversary of the artist's death, presents Picasso's
unparalleled achievements in all media: painting, sculpture,
drawing and prints. Art historian and curator Pepe Karmel offers
fresh analysis of this great master for a 21st-century audience,
considering Picasso's work through the lens of art rather than
biography. He demonstrates how Picasso's style, evolving over the
course of seven decades, introduced visual languages and narratives
that transformed modern art. Arranged chronologically by themes and
movements, Looking at Picasso is profusely illustrated with
renowned paintings, such as the provocative Les Demoiselles
d'Avignon and his monumental Guernica, protesting the horror of
war; these are accompanied by numerous lesser-known works,
including Picasso's daring sculptures and his animated
reinterpretation of Velazquez's 17th-century masterpiece Las
Meninas. Numerous exhibitions planned for 2023 will bring Picasso
to the forefront. This engaging book will appeal to museum-goers
curious to learn more about Picasso's career and anyone interested
in modern art.
Taking a radically new approach to the history of abstract
painting, Pepe Karmel applies a scholarly yet fresh vision to
reconsider the history of abstraction from a global perspective and
to demonstrate that abstraction is embedded in the real world.
Moving beyond the orthodox canonical terrain of abstract art, he
surveys artists from across the globe, examining their work from
the point of view of content rather than form. Previous writers
have approached the history of abstraction as a series of movements
solving a series of formal problems. In contrast, Karmel focuses on
the subject matter of abstract art, showing how artists have used
abstract imagery to express social, cultural and spiritual
experience. An introductory discussion of the work of the early
modern pioneers of abstraction opens up into a completely new
approach to abstract art based around five inclusive themes - the
body, the landscape, the cosmos, architecture, and the repertory of
man-made signs and patterns - each of which has its own chapter.
Starting from a figurative example, Karmel works outwards to
develop a series of narratives that go far beyond the established
figures and movements traditionally associated with abstract art.
Each narrative is complemented by a number of 'featured' abstract
works, which provide an in-depth illustration of the breadth of
Karmel's distinctive vision. A wide-ranging examination of topics -
from embryos to the surface of skin, from vortexes to waves,
planets to star charts, towers to windows - is interwoven with
detailed analysis of works by established figures like Joan Miro
and Jackson Pollock alongside pieces by lesser-known artists such
as Wu Guanzhong, Hilma af Klint and Odili Donald Odita.
|
Joanna Pousette-Dart (Hardcover)
Joanna Pousette-Dart; Text written by Pepe Karmel, Nicholas Logsdail, Nancy Princenthal; Edited by Thomas Phongsathorn, …
|
R933
Discovery Miles 9 330
|
Ships in 12 - 17 working days
|
|
The Cubism Seminars (Paperback)
Harry Cooper; Contributions by Emily Braun, Lisa Florman, Linda Goddard, Maria Gough, …
|
R1,501
Discovery Miles 15 010
|
Ships in 12 - 17 working days
|
The complex facets of Cubism remain relevant subjects in art
history today, a century after Pablo Picasso and Georges Braque
developed the revolutionary style. This impressive collection of
essays by international experts presents new lines of inquiry,
including novel readings of individual objects or groups of works
through close visual, material, and archival analysis; detailed
studies of how Cubism related to intellectual and political
movements of the early 20th century; and accounts of crucial
moments in the reception of Cubism by curators, artists, and
critics. Generous illustrations of paintings, drawings, and
sculptures, some familiar but others virtually unknown, support
this wide range of approaches to the pioneering works of Picasso,
Braque, Fernand Leger, Juan Gris, and others. Distributed for the
National Gallery of Art, Center for Advanced Study in the Visual
Arts
|
|