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Divine People: The Art of Life of Ambrose McEvoy (1877–1927)

Autor Eric Akers-Douglas Editat de Lawrence Hendra
en Limba Engleză Hardback – 23 ian 2020
Ambrose McEvoy (1877–1927) was one of the most modern and daring English society portrait painters of the early twentieth century. He had a quick and confident style of painting and the rare ability to create a portrait that not only reflected the likeness of the subject but captured and reflected their character. By 1915 he was a household name. His work drew the attention of leading society figures like Winston Churchill and Lady Diana Cooper, and prominent socialites and debutantes were soon vying for sittings in his Grosvenor Road studio.
 
Despite his success, McEvoy’s name was quickly forgotten after he died unexpectedly at the peak of his career in 1927. This is due, in part, to the fact that many of his most accomplished works remain tucked away in private collections, and, in part, to the absence of any reliable literature on his life and work. Divine People, the first major written study of McEvoy’s life and work, aims to return this long-neglected artist to the canon of twentieth-century British art.
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Specificații

ISBN-13: 9781911300793
ISBN-10: 1911300792
Pagini: 288
Ilustrații: 100 color plates
Dimensiuni: 171 x 241 x 33 mm
Greutate: 1.09 kg
Ediția:1
Editura: Paul Holberton Publishing
Colecția Paul Holberton Publishing

Notă biografică

Erik Akers-Douglas (1910–1982) was a biographical writer and author of Chief Whip: The Political Life and Times of Aretas Akers-Douglas. Lawrence Hendra is an art historian and specialist in British portraiture from 1550 to 1950.

Recenzii

"Well worth the rediscovery."

"McEvoy’s brushwork brings to mind modern artists from Picasso to the tortured Russian expressionist Chaim Soutinen . . . it’s that sense of the last hurrah of an era that Ambrose McEvoy captured so brilliantly."

"The great value of Eric Chilston’s biography of McEvoy is in its use of primary sources and the author’s deep personal knowledge of his subject."