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Explore the landscapes and places that inspired great art: find
peace in Monet's lily-filled garden oasis, climb Mount Fuji on a
printmaker's pilgrimage, sail with Gauguin to the South Pacific to
stretch your imagination, or contemplate light and the changing
seasons on Chelsea Embankment. Artistic Places is a stunningly
hand-illustrated, visionary guide for seekers of beauty, rare tales
and cultural riches. Find yourself instantly transported to the
places where great artists have sought refuge, found their
inspiration and changed the course of art history forever. Susie
Hodge, bestselling author and art historian, presents 25 famous and
forgotten artistic destinations around the world, and connects
these to the artists they inspired. In keeping with the Inspired
Traveller's Guide series design, each entry is accompanied by
specially commissioned illustrations from Amy Grimes which
perfectly evoke the wonders that first attracted the masters, while
Hodge delves into each location's curious history with insightful
stories both in and beyond the canon. So take a leaf out of your
favourite artist's sketchbook and discover the places they loved
best. Artists and locations include: J.A.M Whistler in London,
England John Constable in Suffolk, England Barbara Hepworth in St
Ives, England Paula Rego in Cascais and Estoril, Portugal Pablo
Picasso and Guernica, Spain Salvador Dali in Catalonia, Spain
Claude Monet in Giverny, France Vincent van Gogh in Arles, France
Rene Magritte in Brussels, Belgium Paul Klee in Bern, Switzerland
Michelangelo in Florence, Italy Canaletto in Venice, Italy Johannes
Vermeer in Delft, Netherlands Anni Albers in Dessau, Germany Caspar
David Friedrich in the Elbe Sandstone Mountains, Germany Gustav
Klimt and Lake Attersee, Austria Edvard Munch in Oslo, Norway Hilma
af Klint and Lake Malaren, Sweden Henri Matisse in Tangier, Morocco
Hokusai on Mount Fuji, Japan Paul Gauguin in Papeete and Papeari,
Tahiti Jean-Michel Basquiat in New York, USA Grant Wood in Iowa,
USA Georgia O'Keeffe in New Mexico, USA Frida Kahlo in Coyoacan,
Mexico Each book in the Inspired Traveller's Guides series offers
readers a fascinating, informative and charmingly illustrated guide
to must-visit destinations round the globe. Also from this series,
explore intriguing: Spiritual Places, Literary Places, Hidden
Places and Mystical Places.
The Short Story of Contemporary Art is a must-read introduction to
this exciting and important period from bestselling author and art
historian Susie Hodge. This fascinating pocket guide to art
explains the how, why and when of contemporary art - who introduced
certain techniques or genres, and why these matter. Simply
constructed, the book explores 40 key works - from the iconic
sculpture of Barbara Hepworth to the street art of Keith Haring and
the performance pieces of Marina Abramovic - and links them to the
most important movements, themes and techniques. Accessible,
concise and richly illustrated, the book reveals the connections
between different periods, artists and styles, giving readers a
thorough understanding and broad enjoyment of contemporary art.
Gustav Klimt, well known for his sensual, arresting depictions of
women (The Kiss, Fulfillment, The Tree of Life), was a founder of
the Viennese Secession movement at the turn of the 20th
century, Vienna's own Art Nouveau. His extravagant
work, was an obsessive manifestation of the dazzling intellectual
society of his time and he painted very large canvases combining
oils with gold foil. This beautiful new book brings together a wide
selection of Klimt’s magnificent work.
How do you sum up the amazing world of art in just 100 words? This
striking book takes on the challenge! From pottery to Pointillism,
each of the carefully chosen 100 words has its own 100-word long
description and quirky illustration, providing a fascinating
introduction to art. Basically, everything you need to know in a
nutshell. Along with some classic methods, such as painting and
sketching, you'll also discover less predictable aspects of art
that will give you a fresh perspective. Featuring materials,
elements, methods, art movements, styles and places this book
covers a wide range of topics and themes, as well as some key
artists of the past and present. With a clean, contemporary design,
each word occupies a page of its own. A large striking illustration
neatly encapsulates the accompanying 100 words of text. Other
titles in the 100 Things to Know About series include: Ancient
World, World Politics, Inventions.
Why Your 5 Year Old Could Not Have Done That is Susie Hodge's
passionate and persuasive argument against the most common
disparaging remark levelled at modern art. In this enjoyable and
thought-provoking book, she examines 100 works of modern art that
have attracted critical and public hostility - from Cy Twombly's
scribbled Olympia (1957), Jean-Michel Basquiat's crude but
spontaneous 'LNAPRK' (1982), to the apparently careless mess of
Tracey Emin's My Bed (1998) - and explains how, far from being
negligible novelties, they are inspired and logical extensions of
the ideas of their time. She explains how such notorious works as
Carl Andre's Equivalent VIII (1966) - the infamous bricks - occupy
unique niches in the history of ideas, both showing influences of
past artists and themselves influencing subsequent artists. With
illustrations of works from Hans Arp to Adolf Woelfli, Hodge places
each work in its cultural context to present an unforgettable
vision of modern art. This book will give you an understanding of
the ways in which modern art differs from the realistic works of
earlier centuries, transforming as well as informing your gallery
visits for years to come.
Brimming with upbeat guidance, this accessible handbook shows how
anyone can use art to enlighten, uplift, calm and ease stress and
anxieties. Visual art is enlightening, challenging, informative and
arresting; but it can also be therapeutic, reducing anxiety and
stress levels, and offering perspective on the challenges that we
all face in our lives. This guide introduces readers to new ways of
looking at a wide range of art. Through careful examination and
explanation, it investigates how engaging with art and drawing upon
its ideas can help everyone feel connected and inspired. From Frida
Kahlo confronting her anxieties to Henri Matisse embracing
happiness, from Louise Bourgeois conquering fear to Auguste Rodin
finding hope, it shows how you too can use art to work through
difficult emotions and improve your mental wellbeing. Even art that
unsettles can help us to think and feel differently. Artists have
been conveying aspirations, emotions, ideas and stories for
thousands of years; this book will help everyone to 'read' these
messages, and thereby to enrich their own emotional life through
art.
A group of primarily Scottish artists (mainly William York
Macgregor, Joseph Crawhall, George Henry, Edward Atkinson Hornel,
Sir John Lavery and Arthur Melville), the Glasgow Boys were active
around the turn of the 20th Century. Though they painted in a
number of different styles, they are connected by their rejection
of classic Victorian painting. Inspired by the luminous techniques
of James McNeil Whistler, they harnessed Impressionistic brushwork
and livid realism in their work, trying new methods and everyday
settings to create stunning works of art. With over 100 images, and
broad introduction, this is a fine addition to Flame Tree's
ever-increasing series on painting and illustration, Masterpieces
of Art.
Great paintings cannot be fully understood in a single encounter;
there is always more to be derived from them. Art lovers may
revisit and reconsider the masterpieces throughout their lives, but
a deeper understanding can only be gained by analysing the painting
in detail, be it the placement of the subject, the lighting, the
style of brushstrokes or the themes. Art in Detail examines 100
iconic paintings from the Western canon and spotlights the finer
points a quick glance will almost certainly fail to reveal. These
include subtle internal details, such as hidden symbols and
artistic tricks employed by the painter to achieve particular
effects. In addition, Susie Hodge writes intelligently about
external influences on the artist – everything from the
socioeconomic context in which he or she flourished, to smaller
local difficulties, such as the level of air pollution at the time
the painting was created. And she treats each of her subjects not
only, to quote Matthew Arnold, ‘as in itself it really is’, but
also as part of a tradition that links the oldest painting to the
most recent, as artists pass a metaphorical baton down through the
ages. With 700 illustrations
Louis Comfort Tiffany was highly skilled in jewellery design,
ceramics, enamels, and metalwork but he is best known for his
beautiful stained-glass designs. Using opalescent glass in a
variety of colours and textures, he created a stunning range of
jewel-like Art Nouveau works that influenced much of American
modern art. This sumptuous new book features page after page of
astounding work, showing Tiffany's skill as a colourist and a
craftsman, with works that still inspire artists and audiences
today.
Celebrated for his use of expressive brush marks, which filled his
paintings with dynamism, light and colour in a way not seen before
in Renaissance art, Tiziano Veccellio became the greatest painter
16th-century Venice had ever known. In the first half of her
beautiful new book, Susie Hodge explores Titian's fascinating life
through his family, friends, patrons and commissions. Starting out
as a young apprentice in the great city of Venice, Titian grew up
surrounded with spectacular works of art, architecture and
sculpture. His early influences and remarkable achievements are
explained clearly with informative and attractive illustrations
throughout. The second half of the book contains a comprehensive
gallery of over 300 of Titian's major works. of art, each of which
is accompanied by a thorough analysis of the artwork and its
significance within the context of Titian's life, his rapidly
changing technique and his body of work as a whole.
Drawing Masterclass explores the act of vision of the world's great
artists, describing how their work was created to allow you to
weave some of their magic into your own paintings. With detailed
analyses and instructive creative tips sections, you can learn how
to convey movement like Degas, apply acrylic like Twombly, and
command colour like Matisse. The book is organized into seven
chapters covering important genres: nudes, figures, landscapes,
still life, heads, fantasy and abstraction. Each chapter selects a
cross section of artists and examines their practice in detail,
using key paintings. Each artist is described through one of 100
selected masterpieces, plus a biographical profile and a practical
look at the way the painting was made: the materials and technique,
an examination of the ideas and inspiration behind its making and
how the artist's life might reflect their concerns. Light and
shade, rhythm, form, space, contour and composition are all covered
in detail. The book covers a broad historical and geographic sweep,
and includes many of the most celebrated male and female artists.
In a series of 50 accessible essays, Susie Hodge introduces and
explains the central concepts that underpin Western art and design.
From Romanesque to Realism, Pop Art to Pluralism, 50 Art Ideas is a
complete introduction to the most important art concepts in
history.
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Artists at Home
Susie Hodge
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R680
Discovery Miles 6 800
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Ships in 10 - 15 working days
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Take a look inside the homes of some of your favourite artists and
explore how each one reflected their spirit and creativity. From
William Morris and Pablo Picasso to Georgia
O’Keeffe and Frida Kahlo, Artists at Home
showcases the quiet
retreats, creative hubs, lifelong homes and
holiday escapes of key artistic figures. Author Susie Hodge
introduces readers to each artist's life and work,
placing the significance of the home at the heart of their
practice before exploring how each location both reflected and
inspired their creative output. By delving into their homes – the
architecture, interiors, the lives lived there, and the work
created there – we can see these artists’ private spaces as
reflections of their artistic output. For these inspiring people,
homes are places where the boundaries between work, creativity and
daily life are indistinct – they are as much as reflection of
their artistic intention as the great artworks that made their
name.Â
Why did Michelangelo paint the Sistine Chapel, or Rembrandt obsess
over painting his own image? What's the secret behind the
Terracotta Army, or Andy Warhol's soup cans? Art: Explained offers
straightforward and satisfying answers to 100 of these fascinating
questions. If you've ever looked at an art masterpiece in awe, but
wondered just what it means, here is your guide.
The Short Story of Art is a new and innovative introduction to the
subject of art. Simply constructed, the book explores 50 key works,
from the wall paintings of Lascaux to contemporary installations,
and then links these to sections on art movements, themes and
techniques. The design of the book allows the student or art
enthusiast to easily navigate their way around key periods, artists
and styles. Accessible and concise, it simplifies and explains the
most important and influential concepts in art, and shows how they
are connected. The book explains how, why and when art changed, who
introduced certain things, what they were, where they were
produced, and whether they matter. It demystifies artistic jargon,
giving readers a thorough understanding and broad enjoyment of art.
An American who spent most of his life in Europe, a portraitist who
painted landscapes, a family man who never married, and an
accomplished pianist who often entertained his sitters, John Singer
Sargent (1856-1925) was one of the most influential portrait
painters of his time, but he is also an enigma. Despite his huge
body of work, we know little about Sargent the man. Truly
international, he was acclaimed on both sides of the Atlantic, and
was close friends with many of the leading artists, writers, actors
and musicians of his generation. Over the course of his career,
Sargent created roughly 900 oil paintings, more than 2,000
watercolours and a vast number of sketches and charcoal drawings.
He travelled extensively, to Venice, the Tyrol, Capri, Corfu,
Spain, France, England, Holland, the Middle East, Canada and across
America. Wherever he went, he captured the people and the
surroundings. Using the fluid brushwork that had been introduced by
his friends the Impressionists, his portraits are intimate and
experimental, conveying both superficial appearances and
psychological depths, and his landscapes are atmospheric and
immediate. Sargent was in constant demand for his portraits, and
during his lifetime he was perceived as a far more significant
artist than contemporary avant-garde painters such as Paul Cezanne
(1839-1906) and Paul Gauguin (1848-1903), and he allied himself
with one of the most progressive, independent ateliers in Paris.
His style fused the spectacular Impressionistic brushwork with
techniques he learned from both Old and Modern masters, combined
with his interest in human psychology, all consolidated by his own
adroit artistry. Yet during his life, as well as attracting such
acclamation from across Europe and America, he also provoked both
scandal and condemnation, and after his death, he became judged
adversely. As with many artists however, the wheel of favour
eventually turned and once again, in the early 21st century,
Sargent's work was reassessed and revalued and he is now considered
one of the finest and most skilful painters. The first part of this
informative book explores the life of Sargent and the times he
lived in, and the second part is a magnificent gallery of his work,
with details about each painting and its context, with expert
analysis of his style and technique. This beautifully illustrated
volume, with 500 reproductions and images, will be essential
reading for anyone who would like to learn more abut this
intriguing artist, whom The Metropolitan Museum in New York called
`the Van Dyck of our times.'.
The Art of Fine Gifts: Twentieth-century painter, designer and wood
engraver Eric Ravilious was responsible for a fascinating range of
different works, from illustrations for books to designs for
ceramics for the established Wedgwood pottery firm. This gorgeous
new book features beautiful woodcut images of countryside life,
watercolours of rolling landscapes and many of Ravilious' acute and
profound war paintings.
Ever wanted to make a maraca? This step by step guide will show you
how, with clear, engaging photos that show just how easy it is to
make and personalise your very own maraca. Lilac/Band 0 books are
wordless books that tell a story through pictures and are designed
to develop understanding about how stories work. Text type: A
wordless instruction book. Children can recap the stages on
pp.14-15 Curriculum links: Art and Design: Containers
The Short Story of Architecture is a new and innovative guide to
the subject of architecture that explores 50 key buildings, from
the Great Pyramids to high-tech, sustainable skyscrapers.
Accessible and concise, the book links the 50 key works to the most
important architectural materials, elements and styles, giving
readers all the tools they need to understand and appreciate the
built world.
Artists ask questions when they make art - and viewers ask
questions when they look at art. This gently provocative book
provides an engaging way for young people to start asking and
answering questions for themselves. Why is art full of naked
people? is structured around 22 questions, each one tackled over
two spreads. The opening spread explores the question and answer,
inviting the reader to study a full-bleed image of an important
artwork. The second spread shows a selection of work on the theme
from across history, showing how art can run with an idea to hugely
different ends. The tone of the text is fresh and informal but not
flippant.
The Short Story of Women Artists tells the full history - from the
breakthroughs that women have made in pushing for parity with male
artists, to the important contributions made to otherwise
male-dominated artistic movements, and the forgotten and obscured
artists who are now being rediscovered and reassessed. Accessible,
concise and richly illustrated, the book reveals the connections
between different periods, artists and styles, giving readers a
thorough understanding and broad enjoyment of the full achievements
that female artists have made.
Discover 100 wonderful and majestic creatures to draw! Whether you
have your favourites already, or are looking for inspiration from a
range of diverse habitats including rainforests, mountains, polar
regions or the African savannah, you're bound to discover an animal
in this book that you will find irresistible - and you will just
want to pick up your pencil and start drawing! Each animal is
broken down into three or four simple stages that lead you
effortlessly through to the finished drawing. There are no written
instructions to follow - just basic shapes and pencil strokes. Even
if you've never drawn anything before, you will be amazed at how
quickly you will achieve incredibly impressive drawings. Every
project also shows two finished examples of the animal - one shaded
with pencil and the other with colour. This is the perfect book for
budding artists yearning to draw their favourite animals. The
material in this book is taken from the following books in Search
Press's successful How to Draw series: Mountain Animals, Polar
Animals, Rainforest Animals, African Animals.
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