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Jackson Pollock [Englisch] [Gebundene Ausgabe]

Jackson Pollock , Kirk Varnedoe
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Gebundene Ausgabe EUR 32,99  
Gebundene Ausgabe, September 1998 --  
Taschenbuch EUR 20,99  

Produktinformation

  • Gebundene Ausgabe: 336 Seiten
  • Verlag: Museum of Modern Art (September 1998)
  • Sprache: Englisch
  • ISBN-10: 0870700685
  • ISBN-13: 978-0870700682
  • Größe und/oder Gewicht: 30,3 x 25,4 x 3,1 cm
  • Durchschnittliche Kundenbewertung: 4.5 von 5 Sternen  Alle Rezensionen anzeigen (2 Kundenrezensionen)
  • Amazon Bestseller-Rang: Nr. 47.343 in Englische Bücher (Siehe Top 100 in Englische Bücher)
  • Komplettes Inhaltsverzeichnis ansehen

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Dieser Titel ist in englischer Sprache.
Der fast mythische Jackson Pollock, ein tyrannischer, unhöflicher, ungeheuerlich ehrgeiziger, aggressiver, alkoholkranker, gequälter Künstler, ist in diesem Buch höchstlebendig. Aber Kirk Varnedoe und Pepe Karmel, Direktor beziehungsweise stellvertretender Direktor der Abteilung Malerei und Plastik des Museum of Modern Art, befassen sich in einer Art und Weise gründlich mit der Kunst Pollocks, die einem die Augen öffnet. Dieses Buch ist der Katalog zur Retrospektive über Pollocks Werk, das im Herbst 1998 im Museum of Modern Art gezeigt wurde und die Kunstwelt erschütterte. Es enthält viele biographische Bilder wie auch Farbplatten seiner Gemälde, von den unbeholfenen, doch ernsthaften frühen Arbeiten bis hin zu den späten, großartigen, berühmten Werken.

Varnedoes Essay, mit dem treffenden Titel "Komet: Jackson Pollocks Leben und Werk", lädt den Leser ein in Pollocks Welt, beginnend mit seinem Studio auf dem Lande: "Der Bau, der oft als Scheune bezeichnet wird, ist in der Tat nur ein besserer Geräteschuppen." Karmels Essay "Pollock bei der Arbeit: Die Filme und Fotografien von Hans Namuth" ist eine wahrhaft umwälzende Exploration von Pollocks Maltechnik. Karmel hat jedes Einzelbild von jedem Film sowie jedes Foto, das je von Pollocks Malerei aufgenommen wurde, genau untersucht. Er kommt zu einigen absolut originären Schlüssen: Pollocks großflächige Spiralen aus getropfter und geschleuderter Farbe fingen oft als gegenständliche Arbeiten an und stehen eindeutig mit typisch amerikanischen Größen wie dem Historienmaler Thomas Hart Benton im Zusammenhang. Karmel macht unzählige weitere scharfsichtige Beobachtungen: Er bemerkt zum Beispiel die Diskrepanz zwischen den schnell aussehenden Farbgebungen und den langsamen, gezielten Bewegungen, mit denen sie aufs Bild gebracht wurden (und umgekehrt). Sein Essay ist ein brillantes, hochwissenschaftliches Werk, das spannend geschrieben ist und für immer die Art und Weise ändern wird, wie seriöse Betrachter Pollocks Bilder anschauen werden. Es macht diesen Band für das Verständnis der Kunst dieses großen, traurigen Künstlers absolut unentbehrlich. --Peggy Moorman -- Dieser Text bezieht sich auf eine vergriffene oder nicht verfügbare Ausgabe dieses Titels.

Amazon.co.uk

The almost mythic Jackson Pollock--a roughshod, ill-mannered, prodigiously ambitious, aggressive, alcoholic, tormented artist--is alive and unwell in this book. But Kirk Varnedoe and Pepe Karmel, the chief curator and adjunct assistant curator, respectively, of the New York Museum of Modern Art's Department of Painting and Sculpture, also go deeply into Pollock's art in eye-opening ways. This book is the catalogue for the retrospective of Pollock's art-shattering oeuvre at the New York Museum of Modern Art in the autumn of 1998 and London's Tate Gallery in the spring of 1999. It includes many biographical pictures as well as colour plates of Pollock's paintings, from the awkward but earnest early works to the late, great, famous canvases. Varnedoe's essay, aptly titled "Comet: Jackson Pollock's Life and Work," deftly invites the reader into Pollock's world, starting with his country studio: "The structure, often called a barn, is in fact more like a glorified tool shed." Karmel's essay, "Pollock at Work: The Films and Photographs of Hans Namuth," is a truly groundbreaking exploration of Pollock's technique. Karmel has scrutinised every frame of every piece of film, still or moving, ever taken of Pollock painting. He arrives at absolutely original conclusions: Pollock's all-over swirls of dripped and flung paint often began as figurative works and clearly relate to such all-American stalwarts as Thomas Hart Benton. Karmel makes countless other sharp observations, noting the difference, for example, between fast-looking marks and the slow, deliberate movements with which they were made (and vice versa). His essay is a work of brilliant scholarship, written thrillingly, and it will forever change the way any serious viewer looks at Pollock's paintings. It makes this volume absolutely essential for understanding the work of this great, sad artist. --Peggy Moorman -- Dieser Text bezieht sich auf eine vergriffene oder nicht verfügbare Ausgabe dieses Titels.

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Die hilfreichsten Kundenrezensionen
Format:Gebundene Ausgabe
Excellent companion piece to the MOMA show (which traveled to London's Tate) goes beyond all other Pollock explorations. A "must" for students of modern American art as well as those just wanting to get a better understanding of what Pollock was REALLY DOING.

Large format features fold-out reproductions of breathtakingly high quality. Among these, incredibly, are paintings not found in any other published sources. (The incomparable Lucifer (1947) is one such work).

The text is scholarly but readable, and although there is a considerable amount of it, each open page of writing offers at least a couple relevant and highly interesting photos or other illustrations. The many large color plates would certainly make a gorgeous and impressive coffee table book for anyone who doesn't choose to read it.

Kirk Varnedoe writes definitively about Pollock's mercurial life & career. Varnedoe's nearly 75 pages of biographical analysis are a welcome alternative to the kind of misguided mythologizing about Pollock that has for a long time colored the artist as an overrated art "star."

Pepe Karmel's contribution to this book is an amazing analysis of Pollock's painting process through an exhaustive examination of the famous films and photographs of Pollock at work. This was a fascinating, ground-breaking part of the exhibition, and is equally wonderful in the book.

Well worth the price.

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Von Ein Kunde
Format:Gebundene Ausgabe
Having just taken in the MoMA show, I was very satisfied with the Pollock catalog. Very nice job reproducing the works (a difficult task in the printing of art catalogs!) Many fold-outs assist in conveying the size of Pollock's larger works. Large, full-bleed detail shots add a nice touch, complimenting the entire painting. While I'm not thrilled with the cover design, the interior is well-written, well-presented, and well-worth reading.
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Amazon.com:  9 Rezensionen
26 von 26 Kunden fanden die folgende Rezension hilfreich
Pollock Without the Boring Mythologizing 5. Juni 2000
Von Renee Thorpe - Veröffentlicht auf Amazon.com
Format:Gebundene Ausgabe
Excellent companion piece to the MOMA show (which traveled to London's Tate) goes beyond all other Pollock explorations. A "must" for students of modern American art as well as those just wanting to get a better understanding of what Pollock was REALLY DOING.

Large format features fold-out reproductions of breathtakingly high quality. Among these, incredibly, are paintings not found in any other published sources. (The incomparable Lucifer (1947) is one such work).

The text is scholarly but readable, and although there is a considerable amount of it, each open page of writing offers at least a couple relevant and highly interesting photos or other illustrations. The many large color plates would certainly make a gorgeous and impressive coffee table book for anyone who doesn't choose to read it.

Kirk Varnedoe writes definitively about Pollock's mercurial life & career. Varnedoe's nearly 75 pages of biographical analysis are a welcome alternative to the kind of misguided mythologizing about Pollock that has for a long time colored the artist as an overrated art "star."

Pepe Karmel's contribution to this book is an amazing analysis of Pollock's painting process through an exhaustive examination of the famous films and photographs of Pollock at work. This was a fascinating, ground-breaking part of the exhibition, and is equally wonderful in the book.

Well worth the price.

24 von 24 Kunden fanden die folgende Rezension hilfreich
simply the best 7. August 2003
Von christopher wren - Veröffentlicht auf Amazon.com
Format:Gebundene Ausgabe
This breathtaking catalogue is simply the best single volume available on Jackson Pollock, and this is primarily--but not only--because of the number and quality of the reproductions it offers. Almost every one of the dozen or so Pollock books in my library contains a painting not available in the others, but this book collects and beautifully photographs the greatest number and variety of his canvases--outside of a catalogue raisonee.

As the other reviewers state, there are many generously-sized fold-out pages here, and the crispness and resolution of these big reprints and of the more modest pages are simply amazing. To take two essential examples, this book's reprints of "One: Number 31, 1950" and "Blue Poles: Number 11, 1952" are astoundingly clear, better than any of the many other versions I've seen in art books, even in Ellen Landau's large-format survey, a book which also includes gatefolds.

(Another reviewer, by the by, states that "Lucifer" is not available in any other book, which is not true. Among other places, it appears in Landau, in Elizabeth's Frank's concise volume, and as the sole color reproduction in the book for the 1965 MOMA retrospective. Anyway, it gets terrific treatment here.)

Another invaluable inclusion in this book is a great number of full-sized detail photos of the canvases. For example, on a page adjacent to "Lucifer" and "Autumn Rhythm" and "Full Fathom Five," we see another photo of just one small section of that same painting but in 1-to-1 scale; these details reveal much of the dynamic, kinetic, urgent quality of these works, their encrustations of sand, glass, pennies, paint caps--traits which even this book could otherwise never offer a livingroom Pollock-viewer.

Further, having seen the exhibit in January of 1999, I can attest to the generally excellent fidelity of the color-balance. (Curiously, no one seems to be able to capture "Autumn Rhythm"'s grey-teal passages in a book, but if you were at this show or have viewed the painting at the Met you've seen them.)

The accompanying articles are excellent. Kirk Varnedoe overviews of Pollock's life, artistic aims, his accomplishments, all illustrated with family and archival photographs and drawing on Pollock quotations. Pepe Karmel uses the extensive photographic and film record of Pollock painting to analyze Pollock's physical movements. Most wonderful are Karmel's computer reconstructions of early states of the painting "Autumn Rythm," based on Hans Namuth's photos of Pollock at work.

In sum, this book gives the finest, fullest offering of both Pollock's life and art.

17 von 17 Kunden fanden die folgende Rezension hilfreich
Best Reproductions and Most Complete 31. Mai 2001
Von mix whit - Veröffentlicht auf Amazon.com
Format:Gebundene Ausgabe
I picked this book up at the MOMA Pollock retrospective a couple years ago and have used it extensively. Having seen many of the paintings in this book firsthand, I can say that these are some of the best reproductions offerred in book form on Pollock's work. Another plus is that several paintings are printed on fold-out pages, so that the work doesn't cross the book's seam. So many of his paintings are extremely wide that this makes a lot of sense (otherwise, there would be hardly any resolution in the height dimension).

If you're interested in Pollock and need to refer to the reproductions, I absolutely recommend this book above all others out there.

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