Categories
Australia and New Zealand Biographies Technique

Sidney Nolan: The Artist’s Materials by Paula Dredge

Dear Readers, wishing you a happy new year 2020! It is said that sometimes medium is that message. This fact is highlighted time and again in the art world as artists explore different methods and media to capture and convey creative impulses. This month we bring to you the works of a celebrated artist – Sidney Nolan, in this beautiful book by Paula Dredge. Read on…

The newest addition to the Artist’s Materials series offers the first technical study

of one of Australia’s greatest modern painters.

 Sidney Nolan (1917–1992) is renowned for an oeuvre ranging from views of Melbourne’s seaside suburb St. Kilda to an iconic series on outlaw hero Ned Kelly. Working in factories from age fourteen, Nolan began his training spray painting signs on glass, which was followed by a job cutting and painting displays for Fayrefield Hats. Such employment offered him firsthand experience with commercial synthetic paints developed during the 1920s and 1930s.

In 1939, having given up his job at Fayrefield in pursuit of an artistic career, Nolan became obsessed with European abstract paintings he saw reproduced in books and magazines. With little regard for the longevity of his work, he began to exploit materials such as boot polish, dyes, secondhand canvas, tissue paper, and old photographs, in addition to commercial and household paints. He continued to embrace new materials after moving to London in 1953. Oil-based Ripolin enamel is known to have been Nolan’s preferred paint, but this fascinating study—certain to appeal to conservators, conservation scientists, art historians, and general readers with an interest in modern art—reveals his equally innovative use of nitrocellulose, alkyds, and other diverse materials.

From the book description

This book will fascinate the students of art techniques and art aficionados alike. Highly recommended for gaining an advanced understanding of applied art. Widely available at leading book stores.

Categories
Biographies India Modern

Art and Independence: YG Srimati and the Indian Style by John Guy

We are actually growing very tired of non Indian writers claiming authoritative position on Indian art, history, religions, society and so on and so forth. However, this book is quite different. John Guy aims to correct the legacy of YG Smriti, a somewhat controversial figure in the Indian art scene during the mid last century. Read on…

• Offers a historical corrective to re-establish the legacy of YG Srimati, one of modern India’s finest artists

• At a time when there is renewed interest in the voices and works of women artists, this volume takes us through the life and genius of one such artist from India

• This volume offers an insight into the way that styles and trends influence the art world, with artists falling out of favor for complex reasons that have nothing to do with talent

• Beautifully illustrated with nearly 130 images

The career of Y.G. Srimati – classical singer, musician, dancer and painter – represents a continuum in which each of these skills and experiences merged, influencing and pollinating each other.

Born in Mysore in 1926, Srimati was part of the generation much influenced by the rediscovery of a classical Sanskrit legacy devoted to the visual arts. Soon swept up in the nationalist movement for an independent India, she was deeply moved by the time she spent with Mahatma Gandhi. For the young Srimati, the explicit referencing of the past and of religious subjects came together in an unparalleled way, driven by the conscious striving for an indigenous agenda. This experience gave form and meaning to her art, and largely defined her style.

As John Guy demonstrates in this sumptuous volume, as a painter of the mid and late twentieth century, Y.G. Srimati embodied a traditionalist position, steadfast in her vision of an Indian style, one which resonated with those who knew India best.

From the book description

If for nothing else, you should buy this book for the wonderful 130 illustrations and the excellent compilation. We will not comment on the writer’s opinions and leave that work to the reader – you! Widely available at leading book stores.

Categories
Biographies Design Japan

Yoshitaka Amano: The Illustrated Biography-Beyond the Fantasy by Florent Gorges

Dear Readers, wishing you a very happy and a prosperous new year 2019! It seems like we cannot have enough of Japan, therefore, this month we present to you a wholesome collection of art presented in a biographical format. Those who are familiar with Yoshitaka Amano must know the dazzling fantasy world created and nurtured by this great artist of our times. Read on…

A beautiful celebration of the life and imagery of Japan’s master of fantasy and science fiction art! This handsome, landscape-style hardback contains nearly 400 illustrations and photos from the incredible career of Final Fantasy designer Yoshitaka Amano.

But Beyond the Fantasy covers far more than just the famous game series. Amano’s artistic journey goes back to his first job in 1967—age 15, working on Speed Racer! From animator, to illustrator, to internationally exhibited painter, this biography is a look not only into the work of Amano’s life, but the influences, techniques, philosophy, and family that have nurtured it.

From the book description.

This is a great book for all those readers who enjoy learning about Japan, If you are not familiar with fantasy world, you will learn a lot about it. This book is not widely available. Reserve your copy by calling your local book store ahead.

Categories
Biographies

the point in between: the ART of PHIL KURZ by Cynthia Hatfield

Who loves arcane stuff? We do. And this month we bring to you a book about an artist who is relatively unknown and whose works are obscure and underappreciated, even though the art is extremely important. Readers who pick up random books on book shelves in a book store can discover this hitherto unexplored book. Read on…

The art of Phil Kurz shows the history of Phil’s journey into the art and writing world. Published by the Black Mountain Press as the exhibition catalog for Phil Kurz’s opening exhibition at the Flood Fine Art Center in 2018. Written by Cynthia Hatfield, designed by Cynthia A. Potter.

From the book description

We find no reason why you should be chasing after this book. This is just one of those that turn up from nowhere.

Categories
Biographies Latin America

Frida by Sebastien Paerez

How many times have you wondered what is really going on in an artist’s mind, in their lives, and their surroundings? We can infer about an artist’s life from their work, but can we really be confidence about such inferences? Maybe. Here is an excellent book on Frida Kahlo that takes you on a journey to the celebrated artist’s life and works. Readers with global interests will surely enjoy this visual treat. Read on…

A sumptuous feast of a book, Frida allows the reader to enter this revered artist’s world, both literally and metaphorically.

Through a series of consecutive die-cut pages, one is drawn in passing through aspects of her life, art and creative process while exploring the themes that inspired her most, such as love, death and maternity. Iconic and visceral, her work has always had the ability to transcend borders and resonate with its honest and graphic depiction of the human condition. Until now, there has never been a greater homage. Excerpts from Frida Kahlo’s personal diaries alternate with Sebastien Perez’s poetic musings to give fresh insight and emotional depth, while Benjamin Lacombe’s stunning artwork masterfully conveys the symbolism and surrealism of her art. This is a must-have for every Frida fan or bibliophile.

From the book description

This is one of those rare books that combine multiple art forms in one – including fine arts, musings, and poetry from Frida Kahlo. We hope you will absolutely enjoy this book. Widely available at all leading book stores.

Categories
Biographies Modern

Andy Warhol: The LIFE Years 1949-1959 by Paul Tanner

For the readers who are familiar with the ubiquitous Campbell soup can, Andy Warhol is no stranger. As an icon of modern art, it is befitting tribute to the extraordinary genius who influenced three generations with his iconic designs. This is an excellent collection of Andy Warhol’s works.

In recent years, an extensive collection of drawings was discovered in Andy Warhol’s estate. Dating from the 1950s, the artist’s early years in New York, the drawings took as their inspiration magazine photographs and illustrations—many from LIFE magazine—and provide further insight into Warhol’s unique working method.

Andy Warhol: The “LIFE” Years 1949–1959 publishes a selection of these newly discovered drawings alongside the original photographs and illustrations. Drawing was an important part of Warhol’s early practice, and he was particularly inspired by the rich visual language found in LIFE and its contemporaries. Many of his drawings were copied with his trademark “blotted line” technique, a basic method of printmaking in which Warhol traced projected photographic images onto paper and then blotting the inked figures to create variations on a theme.

Presenting more than one hundred of the finest of these drawings, including many that have never before been published, the book also offers an informative and accessible discussion of Warhol’s working method and the cultural setting in which he created the drawings.

From the book description

Hope the fans of Andy Warhol will thoroughly enjoy this new collection. Now available at several leading book stores.

Categories
Architecture Biographies Design Performing Arts

Ming Cho Lee: A Life in Design by Arnold Aronson

Happy New Year 2015!

This month, we bring a special treat to you about a glorious career in the arts, Ming Cho Lee. He has made significant contributions to the performing arts in America. This very beautiful coffee table book by Arnold Aronson, pays a well deserved tribute in prose and photographs to Ming Cho Lee’s great career.

Ming Cho Lee is not only one of the most important American designers of the twentieth century, but one of the most significant influences on American theatre. As a designer, he drew upon his training in Chinese watercolor, the aesthetics of his mentors, Jo Mielziner and Boris Aronson, and the post-war developments in German design to develop a new approach to stage design that radically altered American scenography. He broke new ground, combined existing motifs in startling new ways and continued to explore new ideas throughout his entire career. Lee introduced a sculptural style with soaring verticality that had been largely unknown to American stages. The painterly image was replaced with a decidedly modern and industrial scenic vocabulary that emphasized stage-as-stage.

Lee has designed more than 300 productions of theatre, opera and dance, beginning with his first student work, The Silver Whistle at Occidental College in 1952, through his last productions in 2005. Unlike his predecessors, Lee did not make his mark on Broadway. Rather, it was achieved through some forty productions with the New York Shakespeare Festival, including eleven seasons at the Delacorte Theater from its opening in 1962; thirteen productions for New York City Opera, beginning with its inaugural production at Lincoln Center; five mainstage productions for the Metropolitan Opera, including Boris Godunov, which stayed in the repertoire for more than thirty years; twenty-one productions for Arena Stage in Washington D.C., and numerous other productions at regional theatres including the Mark Taper Forum in Los Angeles, Shakespeare Theatre Company in Washington, D.C., Long Wharf Theatre in New Haven, the Guthrie Theater in Minneapolis, and Actors Theatre of Louisville; and ten pieces for the Joffrey Ballet, as well as productions for Martha Graham, Alvin Ailey, Elliot Feld, the Pacific Northwest Ballet and Cloud Gate Dance Theatre of Taiwan.

Called “the dean of American set designers” by the New York Times, Lee had an impact that goes well beyond his own work. As a teacher, including more than forty years at the Yale School of Drama, Lee shaped generations of theatre artists—not only set designers, but costume and lighting designers, as well as directors, writers and dramaturgs. It is through these students that he helped transform not only American scenography but the larger aesthetics of American theatre.

For this richly detailed exploration of Lee’s work, theatre historian Arnold Aronson spent hundreds of hours interviewing Lee at his legendary New York apartment. The book is both a study of and a conversation with Ming Cho Lee. Each image selected for this book was chosen personally by Lee from thousands of photos, drawings, sketches, renderings and models, all carefully cataloged by Lee’s wife and lifelong archivist, Betsy. Lee’s work has been showcased at the New York Public Library and the Yale School of Architecture, and his honors include a Tony Award for best scenic design of a play, an Outer Critics Circle Award, three Drama Desk Awards, a special Tony Award for lifetime achievement and the National Medal of the Arts, the highest national award given in the arts.

From the book description

We hope you will thoroughly enjoying getting to know more about Ming Cho Lee and his singular career.

Have a wonderful 2015! And, for our compatriots in India, wishing you a Happy Republic Day!