Henri Evenepoel

Henri Evenepoel
Author: Paul Lambotte
Publisher:
Total Pages: 194
Release: 1908
Genre: Painters
ISBN:

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Henri Evenepoel

Henri Evenepoel
Author: Franz Hellens
Publisher:
Total Pages: 39
Release: 1947
Genre: Paintings
ISBN:

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Henri Evenepoel,.

Henri Evenepoel,.
Author: Henri Jacques Édouard Evenepoel
Publisher:
Total Pages: 15
Release: 1949
Genre:
ISBN:

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Henri Evenepoel

Henri Evenepoel
Author: Francis Edwin Hyslop
Publisher: Penn State University Press
Total Pages: 168
Release: 1975
Genre: Art
ISBN:

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The Parisian career of the Belgian artist Henri Evenepoel was part of that fabulous decade when the French capital was the center of artistic activity. A student of Gustave Moreau at the Ecole des Beaux -Arts, where he was a classmate and friend Matisse, Evenepoel pursued a wide range of activities including poster design, book illustration, printmaking and music sessions with his friends. Throughout his career Evenepoel carried on an active correspondence with his father and friends in his native Brussels. His letters are filled with a wealth of information, including observations on life in the studios and comments on the exhibited works of Manet, Whistler, Redon, and Bonnard among others. His commentary is conveyed with a vividness that characterizes the era from a unique point of view. Professor Hyslop's study of Evenepoel's art is based on a reading of his correspondence and is illustrated with fifty-two of his works in various media, presenting a fascinating picture of the Paris art world of the nineties. This book introduces to a wider audience the work of a highly talented artist whose early death was a loss to 19th-century painting.

Author: Hilary Spurling
Publisher: Univ of California Press
Total Pages: 540
Release: 2001
Genre:
ISBN: 9780520222038

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From his beginnings as the son of shopkeepers in Flanders through his impoverished days as a student, Spurling traces Matisse's life through his 30s in this thorough and riveting biography. 35 color & 152 b&w illustrations.

Art Books

Art Books
Author: Wolfgang M. Freitag
Publisher: Taylor & Francis
Total Pages: 572
Release: 1997
Genre: Art
ISBN: 9780824033262

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Expanded to twice as many entries as the 1985 edition, and updated with new publications, new editions of previous entries, titles missed the first time around, more of the artists' own writings, and monographs that deal with significant aspects or portions of an artist's work though not all of it. The listing is alphabetical by artist, and the index by author. The works cited include analytical and critical, biographical, and enumerative; their formats range from books and catalogues raisonnes to exhibition and auction sale catalogues. A selection of biographical dictionaries containing information on artists is arranged by country. Annotation copyrighted by Book News, Inc., Portland, OR

The Liberation of Painting

The Liberation of Painting
Author: Patricia Leighten
Publisher: University of Chicago Press
Total Pages: 269
Release: 2013-11-08
Genre: Art
ISBN: 0226471381

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The years before World War I were a time of social and political ferment in Europe, which profoundly affected the art world. A major center of this creative tumult was Paris, where many avant-garde artists sought to transform modern art through their engagement with radical politics. In this provocative study of art and anarchism in prewar France, Patricia Leighten argues that anarchist aesthetics and a related politics of form played crucial roles in the development of modern art, only to be suppressed by war fever and then forgotten. Leighten examines the circle of artists—Pablo Picasso, Juan Gris, František Kupka, Maurice de Vlaminck, Kees Van Dongen, and others—for whom anarchist politics drove the idea of avant-garde art, exploring how their aesthetic choices negotiated the myriad artistic languages operating in the decade before World War I. Whether they worked on large-scale salon paintings, political cartoons, or avant-garde abstractions, these artists, she shows, were preoccupied with social criticism. Each sought an appropriate subject, medium, style, and audience based on different conceptions of how art influences society—and their choices constantly shifted as they responded to the dilemmas posed by contradictory anarchist ideas. According to anarchist theorists, art should expose the follies and iniquities of the present to the masses, but it should also be the untrammeled expression of the emancipated individual and open a path to a new social order. Revealing how these ideas generated some of modernism’s most telling contradictions among the prewar Parisian avant-garde, The Liberation of Painting restores revolutionary activism to the broader history of modern art.

Les Fauves

Les Fauves
Author: Russell T. Clement
Publisher: Bloomsbury Publishing USA
Total Pages: 720
Release: 1994-05-25
Genre: Art
ISBN: 0313369550

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This is the first comprehensive scholarly bibliography/research guide/sourcebook on the major French Fauve painters (Henri Matisse and Georges Braque are treated in separate Greenwood bio-bibliographies). It includes information on 3,120 books and articles as well as chronologies, biographical sketches, and exhibition lists. Each artist receives a primary and secondary bibliography with many annotated entries. Secondary bibliographies include details about each artists' life and career, relationships with other artists, work in various media, iconography, and more. Designed for art historians, art students, museum and gallery curators, and art lovers alike, this volume organizes the vast literature surrounding this fascinating, revolutionary, 20th-century art group. Genuinely new art is always challenging, sometimes even shocking to those unprepared for it. In 1905, the paintings of Matisse, Derain, Vlaminck and their friends shocked conservative museum-goers; hence, the eventual popularity of art critic Louis Vauxcelles's tag les fauves, or wild beasts by which these artists became known. Although it lasted only three or four years, Fauvism is recognized as the first artistic revolution of international consequence in the 20th century. It was based on the glorification of pure saturated colors and the free expression of primitivism. It was a dynamic sensualism; an equilibrium of passion and order, fire and austerity that could not last. By the end of 1908, Fauvism collapsed in the face of Cubism, which, moreover, several Fauve artists helped to form.

Orientalist Aesthetics

Orientalist Aesthetics
Author: Roger Benjamin
Publisher: Univ of California Press
Total Pages: 394
Release: 2003-02-03
Genre: Architecture
ISBN: 0520924401

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Lavishly illustrated with exotic images ranging from Renoir's forgotten Algerian oeuvre to the abstract vision of Matisse's Morocco and beyond, this book is the first history of Orientalist art during the period of high modernism. Roger Benjamin, drawing on a decade of research in untapped archives, introduces many unfamiliar paintings, posters, miniatures, and panoramas and discovers an art movement closely bound to French colonial expansion. Orientalist Aesthetics approaches the visual culture of exoticism by ranging across the decorative arts, colonial museums, traveling scholarships, and art criticism in the Salons of Paris and Algiers. Benjamin's rediscovery of the important Society of French Orientalist Painters provides a critical context for understanding a lush body of work, including that of indigenous Algerian artists never before discussed in English. The painter-critic Eugène Fromentin tackled the unfamiliar atmospheric conditions of the desert, Etienne Dinet sought a more truthful mode of ethnographic painting by converting to Islam, and Mohammed Racim melded the Persian miniature with Western perspective. Benjamin considers armchair Orientalists concocting dreams from studio bric-à-brac, naturalists who spent years living in the oases of the Sahara, and Fauve and Cubist travelers who transposed the discoveries of the Parisian Salons to create decors of indigenous figures and tropical plants. The network that linked these artists with writers and museum curators was influenced by a complex web of tourism, rapid travel across the Mediterranean, and the march of modernity into a colonized culture. Orientalist Aesthetics shows how colonial policy affected aesthetics, how Europeans visualized cultural difference, and how indigenous artists in turn manipulated Western visual languages.