The Art of Rivalry: Four Friendships, Betrayals, and Breakthroughs in Modern Art
Autor Sebastian Smeeen Limba Engleză Paperback – 4 oct 2017
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Specificații
ISBN-13: 9781781251669
ISBN-10: 1781251665
Pagini: 416
Ilustrații: 8 pages of colour plates.
Dimensiuni: 130 x 196 x 30 mm
Greutate: 0.36 kg
Ediția:Main
Editura: Profile
Colecția Profile Books
Locul publicării:London, United Kingdom
ISBN-10: 1781251665
Pagini: 416
Ilustrații: 8 pages of colour plates.
Dimensiuni: 130 x 196 x 30 mm
Greutate: 0.36 kg
Ediția:Main
Editura: Profile
Colecția Profile Books
Locul publicării:London, United Kingdom
Notă biografică
Sebastian
Smee
is
the
arts
critic
for
the
Boston
Globe,
and
has
written
for
the
Australian,
Daily
Telegraph,
Guardian,
The
Times,
Financial
Times,
Independent
on
Sunday,
Art
Newspaper
and
the
Spectator.
He
is
the
author
of
the
books
Lucian
Freud
and
Side
by
Side:
Picasso
v
Matisse.
He
won
the
2011
Pulitzer
Prize
for
Criticism
for
his
'vivid
and
exuberant
writing
about
art,
often
bringing
great
works
to
life
with
love
and
appreciation'.
Recenzii
Intriguing
...
Smee
writes
beautifully
...
tantalising
Elegant ... accomplished
Lively and engaging
A fascinating examination ... This is art history as human friction - one in the eye for those who think art is a high-minded enterprise.
The keynotes of Sebastian Smee's criticism have always included a fine feeling for the what of art - he knows how to evoke the way pictures really strike the eye - and an equal sense of the how of art: how art emerges from the background of social history. To these he now adds a remarkable capacity for getting down the who of art - the enigma of artist's personalities, and the way that, two at a time, they can often intersect to reshape each in the other¹s image. With these gifts all on the page together, The Art of Rivalry gives us a remarkable and engrossing book on pretty much the whole of art.
A magnificent book on the relationships at the roots of artistic genius. Smee offers a gripping tale of the fine line between friendship and competition, tracing how the ties that torment us most are often the ones that inspire us most.
Modern art's major pairs of frenemies are a subject so fascinating, it's strange to have a book on it only now - and a stroke of luck, for us, that the author is Sebastian Smee. He brings the perfect combination of artistic taste and human understanding, and a prose style as clear as spring water, to the drama and occasional comedy of men who inspired and annoyed one another to otherwise inexplicable heights of greatness.
One of those rare books that manages to show,convincingly, the exalted stuff of genius emerging from the low chaos of life
Elegant ... accomplished
Lively and engaging
A fascinating examination ... This is art history as human friction - one in the eye for those who think art is a high-minded enterprise.
The keynotes of Sebastian Smee's criticism have always included a fine feeling for the what of art - he knows how to evoke the way pictures really strike the eye - and an equal sense of the how of art: how art emerges from the background of social history. To these he now adds a remarkable capacity for getting down the who of art - the enigma of artist's personalities, and the way that, two at a time, they can often intersect to reshape each in the other¹s image. With these gifts all on the page together, The Art of Rivalry gives us a remarkable and engrossing book on pretty much the whole of art.
A magnificent book on the relationships at the roots of artistic genius. Smee offers a gripping tale of the fine line between friendship and competition, tracing how the ties that torment us most are often the ones that inspire us most.
Modern art's major pairs of frenemies are a subject so fascinating, it's strange to have a book on it only now - and a stroke of luck, for us, that the author is Sebastian Smee. He brings the perfect combination of artistic taste and human understanding, and a prose style as clear as spring water, to the drama and occasional comedy of men who inspired and annoyed one another to otherwise inexplicable heights of greatness.
One of those rare books that manages to show,convincingly, the exalted stuff of genius emerging from the low chaos of life