Circles and Squares: The Lives and Art of the Hampstead Modernists
Autor Caroline Macleanen Limba Engleză Paperback – 17 feb 2021
Preț: 53.19 lei
Preț vechi: 70.13 lei
-24% Nou
Puncte Express: 80
Preț estimativ în valută:
10.18€ • 10.81$ • 8.43£
10.18€ • 10.81$ • 8.43£
Carte disponibilă
Livrare economică 05-19 decembrie
Livrare express 20-26 noiembrie pentru 37.87 lei
Preluare comenzi: 021 569.72.76
Specificații
ISBN-13: 9781408889688
ISBN-10: 1408889684
Pagini: 320
Dimensiuni: 129 x 198 x 27 mm
Greutate: 0.27 kg
Editura: Bloomsbury Publishing
Colecția Bloomsbury Publishing
Locul publicării:London, United Kingdom
ISBN-10: 1408889684
Pagini: 320
Dimensiuni: 129 x 198 x 27 mm
Greutate: 0.27 kg
Editura: Bloomsbury Publishing
Colecția Bloomsbury Publishing
Locul publicării:London, United Kingdom
Caracteristici
Combining vivid portraits of artists with a broad perspective of their times, this will appeal to readers of Alexandra Harris's Romantic Moderns, Agnes Poirier's Left Bank, Cate Haste's Passionate Spirit and Fiona MacCarthy's Walter Gropius
Notă biografică
Caroline Maclean studied English and History of Art at Oxford University before completing her PhD at the University of London. She worked in film and television and lived in New York and Boston before moving back to London where she combines writing with teaching. She has written for the London Review of Books and the Times Literary Supplement
Recenzii
Caroline Maclean has given us a finely researched, superlatively written and always enthralling account of the private lives and entangled love affairs of a group of artists who changed the face of British art - and whose ideas about architecture speak to us as urgently as ever. A wonderful book
From Bauhaus to bohemian love . the intricate lives and art of interwar modernists are captured in this hugely enjoyable and well-plotted book . Circles and Squares is a skilful work of synthesis
A fascinating, extremely moving account of an attempt at communal living right in the heart of London. So many of the major artists of the twentieth century are here. Questions of how to live and how to make art jostle together and there's much to inspire and challenge us now
In this engrossing, superbly written biography, Caroline Maclean explores the vanished world of the Hampstead Modernists of the 1930s. Her cast list reads like a "who's who" of the pre-war British art world
Bloomsbury's dead. Long live Hampstead ... Maclean brings this charged decade, in which a slice of London bohemia debated endlessly how best to live and love, and shook British art from its stupor in the process, to glowing life . She recreates beautifully the strange mix of buoyancy and instability that characterised the decade
Full of entertaining snapshots . Maclean does much to recreate the atmosphere of Hampstead. One wants very much to be there
As a tale of journeys both geographical and emotional, and relationships that withstood conflicting ideals and frequent rearrangements, the book is captivating and wide-reaching . Caroline Maclean's enthusiastic, even breathless, canter through British art in the 1930s shows us where this country was once almost at the vanguard
Caroline Maclean's breezy account of Hampstead in the 1930s offers abundant evidence that the area really was a hotbed of new ideas, new forms and new ways of living ... [The book evokes] a sense of an era in which it was bliss to be alive, and in love, and bursting with creativity and the possibilities of making life and art in new ways
[A] riveting group biography of artists, architects and writers flourishing in England during the 1930s . [The book] fizzes with the creative energy of the times - and is refreshingly short on sentiment . Maclean is the perfect biographer - self-effacing, non-judgmental, unobtrusive
As an introduction to 1930s modernism, Circles and Squares is terrific
[An] impeccably researched social history
This is a story of brave and sometimes brilliant souls defying convention to live and work as they wish
Maclean's group biography brings this charged decade, which shook British art from its stupor, to glowing life
From Bauhaus to bohemian love . the intricate lives and art of interwar modernists are captured in this hugely enjoyable and well-plotted book . Circles and Squares is a skilful work of synthesis
A fascinating, extremely moving account of an attempt at communal living right in the heart of London. So many of the major artists of the twentieth century are here. Questions of how to live and how to make art jostle together and there's much to inspire and challenge us now
In this engrossing, superbly written biography, Caroline Maclean explores the vanished world of the Hampstead Modernists of the 1930s. Her cast list reads like a "who's who" of the pre-war British art world
Bloomsbury's dead. Long live Hampstead ... Maclean brings this charged decade, in which a slice of London bohemia debated endlessly how best to live and love, and shook British art from its stupor in the process, to glowing life . She recreates beautifully the strange mix of buoyancy and instability that characterised the decade
Full of entertaining snapshots . Maclean does much to recreate the atmosphere of Hampstead. One wants very much to be there
As a tale of journeys both geographical and emotional, and relationships that withstood conflicting ideals and frequent rearrangements, the book is captivating and wide-reaching . Caroline Maclean's enthusiastic, even breathless, canter through British art in the 1930s shows us where this country was once almost at the vanguard
Caroline Maclean's breezy account of Hampstead in the 1930s offers abundant evidence that the area really was a hotbed of new ideas, new forms and new ways of living ... [The book evokes] a sense of an era in which it was bliss to be alive, and in love, and bursting with creativity and the possibilities of making life and art in new ways
[A] riveting group biography of artists, architects and writers flourishing in England during the 1930s . [The book] fizzes with the creative energy of the times - and is refreshingly short on sentiment . Maclean is the perfect biographer - self-effacing, non-judgmental, unobtrusive
As an introduction to 1930s modernism, Circles and Squares is terrific
[An] impeccably researched social history
This is a story of brave and sometimes brilliant souls defying convention to live and work as they wish
Maclean's group biography brings this charged decade, which shook British art from its stupor, to glowing life