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A prolific artist with a protean output, Georg Baselitz has
rethought the conventions of a range of media, predominantly
painting and sculpture, over the course of a career of some sixty
years. Born in 1938, Baselitz was expelled from art school in East
Berlin in 1956 for ‘socio-political immaturity’, and moved to
the western half of the city. By the late 1950s, he had rejected
the dominant tendencies of both sides of the country and his
singular achievement was to reintroduce the figure, compromised and
discredited though it was by both Nazism and Communism, into art.
By drawing attention to art by ‘outsiders’, such as psychiatric
patients, and invoking a Parisian model of existentialist art and
literature, Baselitz proposed an alternative European tradition
that did not eliminate the human subject. In alluding later to
movements in German painting such as Expressionism as well as to
artists like Munch, he also consciously rehabilitated the kind of
art that was condemned by Hitler as ‘degenerate’. The book
follows the development of Baselitz’s unique style from his
earliest work through to the most recent creations of his eighth
decade. Calvocoressi’s masterful construction of a chronological
narrative helps us to evaluate Baselitz’s work in terms of the
disruptions of his life – historical upheavals witnessed
alongside an astonishing career. With 406 illustrations in colour
The paintings of the Belgian Surrealist Rene Magritte (1898-1967)
have exerted an extraordinary fascination, particularly since the
enormous increase in awareness and popularity of his work during
the 1960s. Magritte shows us a world of silence and isolation in
which familiar objects are altered or juxtaposed in 'impossible'
combinations in order to create a sense of disorientation and the
absurd. Many of his most memorable paintings date from his three
prolific years 1927-30, when he lived near Paris and was in close
touch with the writer Andre Breton and other French Surrealists. In
his pre-war painting, stylistic concerns were of secondary
importance to Magritte, whose main interest was in ideas or
propositions about the world; for example, many of his paintings
explore the relation between objects and words or between the image
of an object and the object itself. He deliberately cultivated a
cold, unemotive, 'style-less' style. This quality renders the
images of violence and macabre sexuality in some of his works all
the more disturbing. His own 'impressionist' and vache (ugly,
crude) pictures of the 1940s have been rediscovered in the last few
years by a younger generation of painters and critics keenly
responsive to the later work of other masters of parody and
allusion such as Picabia and de Chirico. Richard Calvocoressi's
highly successful introduction to Magritte was first published in
1979 and revised and enlarged by the addition of notes to the
colour plates and many black-and-white illustrations.
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Jenny Saville (Hardcover)
Richard Calvocoressi
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R3,537
R2,705
Discovery Miles 27 050
Save R832 (24%)
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Ships in 9 - 15 working days
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Thirteen years after her first Rizzoli monograph, British artist
Jenny Saville releases this much-anticipated volume--her most
comprehensive to date--including many never-before-published
paintings. One of the most renowned living figurative painters of
our time, Saville has set auction records and her highly sensual
canvases invite us to consider the female form in all its glory.
Great artists are of their moment, but push boundaries to
revitalize our world. The British artist Jenny Saville is best
known for painting monumental close-ups of large nude women
exposing things that are usually left unshown: flab, fat, bulge.
Today, when the body has never mattered more or counted less,
Saville is undoubtedly the painter for our times. Saville has
specialized in subjects on the margins of society: the obese, the
disfigured, and transsexuals; yet under her fluctuating light and
painstaking hues and layers, her subjects transcend their
strangeness to take on a universal quality. Among artists of her
generation, Saville is unusual in her devotion to figurative
painting. This much-anticipated volume unites new work with almost
all of Saville's paintings and drawings to date, many of them
unpublished works. Published in association with Gagosian Gallery,
the book also features a complete and illustrated chronology of the
artist's career. A conversation with acclaimed American
photographer Sally Mann, and essays by art critic Mark Stevens and
Gagosian Director, London Richard Calvocoressi complete the volume.
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