33 Artists in 3 Acts - Sarah Thornton

If meeting 33 Artists in 3 Acts (W.W. Norton, $26.95) seems dizzying, relax. As introduced by Sarah Thornton, author of the acclaimed Seven Days in the Art World, each of these creators comes across as unique and fascinating. Thornton knows today’s art world intimately and discusses its politics and markets as informatively as she presents its leading figures, from Jeff Koons and Damien Hirst to Ai Weiwei and Zeng Fanzhi, Marina Abramovic and Andrea Fraser to the entire Dunham clan—paterfamilias Carroll, his wife Laurie Simmons, and their multi-talented daughter, Lena. In a format that effectively puts her subjects in dialogue with one another, Thornton starts each interview with the question: What is an artist? She elicits a wide array of responses: an artist may be “a myth,” a “product designer,” an “internal other,” a “particular instance of the possible”; all are “hard workers.” As is Thornton, whose rich descriptions of personalities, relationships, and works—paintings, installations, films, sculptures, and less easily categorizable creations, such as Abramovic’s “immaterial energy”—belie the short chapters in which she tours studios and galleries, auditoriums and auction houses.

33 Artists in 3 Acts By Sarah Thornton Cover Image
$26.95
ISBN: 9780393240979
Availability: Special Order—Subject to Availability
Published: W. W. Norton & Company - November 3rd, 2014

33 Artists in 3 Acts By Sarah Thornton Cover Image
$17.95
ISBN: 9780393351675
Availability: Special Order—Subject to Availability
Published: W. W. Norton & Company - September 8th, 2015

Six Drawing Lessons - William Kentridge

In 2012, South African artist William Kentridge delivered the Norton Lectures, joining a list of great artists, writers, and musicians. Each of these presentations, together called Six Drawing Lessons (Harvard, $24.95), begins with a work—whether Kentridge’s animated film (made up of hundreds of charcoal drawings on a single sheet of paper) charged with images of mining or a set design of The Magic Flute—which Kentridge brilliantly connects to topics such as shadows and silhouettes—think Plato’s cave—the depiction of animals, colonial revolts in Africa, translations of Rilke, and the creative possibilities of the studio (“Making a Safe Space for Stupidity”). The book is beautifully designed, with type set in black and burnt umber on ivory paper, and featuring many color photos of Kentridge’s work. It is worth tracking down videos of the actual lectures; Kentridge’s performance is a treat, as is the chance to see the many short films he incorporated in his talks.
Six Drawing Lessons (Charles Eliot Norton Lectures #55) By William Kentridge Cover Image
$37.00
ISBN: 9780674365803
Availability: Backordered
Published: Harvard University Press - September 1st, 2014

The Brilliant History of Color in Art - Victoria Finlay

With commentary as elegant as the images are sumptuous, The Brilliant History of Color in Art (Getty, $24.95) shows its own brilliance in myriad ways. Just as “color” indicates a spectrum of shades, its history charts the courses of changing technologies, surfaces, materials, and images. Telling a broad story of culture, Victoria Finlay, author of the classic Color: A Natural History of the Palette, ranges from caves to cathedrals to iPads, soot and chalk to synthetic paints and digital pixels, revealing the origins and uses of pigments. Along the way, she leaves a trail of fascinating facts, like—well, bread crumbs, which were the original erasers for pencils. She also introduces the people behind the names, such as Benjamin Day, whose namesake dots animate comics. And the iconic blue of the Virgin Mary’s robes? The color came not from Biblical associations but from the valuable pigment of lapis. But working with colors has always been like playing with fire; to get a basic manganese black required heating rocks to 1650 degrees F. The most luminous white entailed the risks of working with lead, while Scheele’s green contained arsenic—the cause of several deaths and suspected (it was in his bedroom wallpaper) in Napoleon’s. Yet colors also soothe the soul, and it’s telling that medieval and Renaissance artists got their pigments from apothecaries, color and medicine sharing the same ingredients.
The Brilliant History of Color in Art By Victoria Finlay Cover Image
$24.95
ISBN: 9781606064290
Availability: Not On Our Shelves—Ships in 1-5 Days
Published: J. Paul Getty Museum - November 1st, 2014

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