The Art of the Affair: An Illustrated History of Love, Sex, and Artistic Influence
Autor Catherine Lacey, Forsyth Harmonen Limba Engleză Hardback – 8 mar 2017
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Specificații
ISBN-13: 9781632866554
ISBN-10: 1632866552
Pagini: 96
Ilustrații: 4-color illustrations throughout; two fold-out spreads.
Dimensiuni: 178 x 184 x 15 mm
Greutate: 0.4 kg
Editura: Bloomsbury Publishing
Colecția Bloomsbury USA
Locul publicării:New York, United States
ISBN-10: 1632866552
Pagini: 96
Ilustrații: 4-color illustrations throughout; two fold-out spreads.
Dimensiuni: 178 x 184 x 15 mm
Greutate: 0.4 kg
Editura: Bloomsbury Publishing
Colecția Bloomsbury USA
Locul publicării:New York, United States
Caracteristici
Beautiful and fun design: 7 x 7 gift format, paper-over-board, multiple eye-catching watercolor portraits on every page -- and two special fold-out spreads.
Notă biografică
Catherine Lacey is the author of the novels Nobody Is Ever Missing, The Answers, and Pew. She has won a Whiting Award, was a finalist for the New York Public Library's Young Lions Fiction Award, and named one of Granta magazine's Best Young American Novelists. She was born in Mississippi and is based in Chicago.Forsyth Harmon is a writer and illustrator based in New York.
Recenzii
Novelist Catherine Lacey and the illustrator Forsyth Harmon team up to draw (literal) lines between artists' marriages, flings, rivalries and assorted other connections. Some couplings in the survey are better known than others; some were more fully consummated than others. Wending its way through Arthur Miller and Marilyn Monroe, Anaïs Nin and Gore Vidal, the book ends with Laurie Anderson and Lou Reed, who, Lacey writes, 'seemed to have had the sort of relationship we should all aspire to.'
This gorgeously illustrated book charts the multiple connections that various artists and creatives of the 20th century had with one another. It's impossible not to lose yourself in the intimate, deliciously scandalous details . . . and to feel a real connection as you look into the deep-set eyes of Caroline Blackwood or a vicarious thrill at the way a cigarette dangles out of Juliette Greco's open mouth.
A dose of naughtily narrated A-list gossip--from Colette to Ellington, Kahlo to Mapplethorpe.
What's compelling about the snapshots of relationships portrayed in The Art of the Affair is not that they are impossible to truly understand, but that they open up the possibilities of further understanding, the invitation to advance beyond the fun romantic nostalgia that draws us to these stories.
A guide to some of the more avant-garde relationships of the past century . . . Some of the fun lies in its choose-your-own-adventure structure, following arrows back and forth across decades and marriages. . . . [T]he perfect coffee-table book for the starving artist in your life.
[A] bright, beautiful gem of a book.
The book is a reminder that art is not created in a vacuum, but arises out of the chemistry, envy, and camaraderie among those who love and create it.
A self-professed "Illustrated History of Love, Sex, and Artistic Influence" promises a certain amount of thrill and titillation, and this one delivers . . . Harmon's watercolor portraits are vibrant with personality and transparent color . . . The visual effect is light and luminous, reminding us of the transient, almost flitting beauty of love that inspires and evaporates . . . Readers will leave these pages with newfound curiosities about, and yes, affection for, artists that weren't on their radar before. In this way, the reader can find herself caught up in some surprising and heartfelt artistic passions of her own.
There's a sort of guilty pleasure that comes with reading a book illustrated on every page. Even more delicious is an illustrated book filled with exposed affairs, connected relationships, and literal-drawn-out lines of influence exposing our favorite artists from the decades gone by. When these elements come together in The Art of the Affair: An Illustrated History of Love, Sex, and Artistic Influence, the result is the most electric read with which to start the new year.
There's significant talent at work here.
Lacey is a very gifted writer and thinker.
[Harmon's] work is youthful, nostalgic; high-fashion, low-fashion; a thought-provoking way of presenting the ordinary, the over-familiar . . . I particularly love [her] portraits.
This gorgeously illustrated book charts the multiple connections that various artists and creatives of the 20th century had with one another. It's impossible not to lose yourself in the intimate, deliciously scandalous details . . . and to feel a real connection as you look into the deep-set eyes of Caroline Blackwood or a vicarious thrill at the way a cigarette dangles out of Juliette Greco's open mouth.
A dose of naughtily narrated A-list gossip--from Colette to Ellington, Kahlo to Mapplethorpe.
What's compelling about the snapshots of relationships portrayed in The Art of the Affair is not that they are impossible to truly understand, but that they open up the possibilities of further understanding, the invitation to advance beyond the fun romantic nostalgia that draws us to these stories.
A guide to some of the more avant-garde relationships of the past century . . . Some of the fun lies in its choose-your-own-adventure structure, following arrows back and forth across decades and marriages. . . . [T]he perfect coffee-table book for the starving artist in your life.
[A] bright, beautiful gem of a book.
The book is a reminder that art is not created in a vacuum, but arises out of the chemistry, envy, and camaraderie among those who love and create it.
A self-professed "Illustrated History of Love, Sex, and Artistic Influence" promises a certain amount of thrill and titillation, and this one delivers . . . Harmon's watercolor portraits are vibrant with personality and transparent color . . . The visual effect is light and luminous, reminding us of the transient, almost flitting beauty of love that inspires and evaporates . . . Readers will leave these pages with newfound curiosities about, and yes, affection for, artists that weren't on their radar before. In this way, the reader can find herself caught up in some surprising and heartfelt artistic passions of her own.
There's a sort of guilty pleasure that comes with reading a book illustrated on every page. Even more delicious is an illustrated book filled with exposed affairs, connected relationships, and literal-drawn-out lines of influence exposing our favorite artists from the decades gone by. When these elements come together in The Art of the Affair: An Illustrated History of Love, Sex, and Artistic Influence, the result is the most electric read with which to start the new year.
There's significant talent at work here.
Lacey is a very gifted writer and thinker.
[Harmon's] work is youthful, nostalgic; high-fashion, low-fashion; a thought-provoking way of presenting the ordinary, the over-familiar . . . I particularly love [her] portraits.