Condizione: Very Good. Hardcover in a bright dust jacket, 208 pages, color plates. Celebrating an experimental decade in the career of Alex Katz, this book introduces audiences to a relatively unknown body of his work. Coming of age as an artist in the 1950s, Alex Katz set out to reinvent representational painting in the wake of Abstract Expressionism. At first, Katz struggled to find an audience, destroying hundreds of canvases. This book surveys the artwork that survived from this momentous decade, one in which he first painted outdoors, innovated with collages, and met Ada del Moro, his wife and muse. The essays in this book contextualize Katz?s painting, consider how he and his peers looked at one another, mined 19th-century portraiture, and borrowed from television, advertising, and cinema. The result is a fascinating study of a young artist laying the groundwork for an astonishingly successful career. Fans of Katz will be inspired by the radicality of his early work, and those being introduced to the artist will be struck by its freshness and relevance. Record # 372022.
Lingua: Inglese
Editore: Colby College Museum of Art, Waterville, Maine, 2016
ISBN 10: 0972848436 ISBN 13: 9780972848435
Da: Mullen Books, ABAA, Marietta, PA, U.S.A.
Hardcover. Condizione: New, in shrinkwrap. Quarto. Hardcover. Crimson cloth/boards; gilt lettering. Crimson, color-illus. dj with black/white lettering on spine. vii, 163 pp. with color images throughout. Catalogue from the exhibition held July 2016 to January 2017. "A Usable Past brings together paintings, sculptures, and works on paper by self-trained artists working in the eastern part of what is now the United States during the long nineteenth century. Produced and originally circulated outside the elite sphere of fine art, these objects emerged from vernacular traditions that favored decorative aesthetics over mimesis. In the twentieth century, artists, scholars, and collectors came to believe that artworks like these expressed such supposedly quintessential American values as industriousness and ingenuity, and that they also served as native precursors to Modernism. A Usable Past features highlights of the Museum's extensive holdings of folk art of the United States supplemented by loans from distinguished New England collections. The exhibition includes many artworks from the American Heritage collection of Edith and Ellerton Jetté-one of the earliest collections to enter the Colby College Museum of Art." - from the Colby College web site.