Rene Magritte Catalogue Raisonne Supplement
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René Magritte
Author | : David Sylvester |
Publisher | : |
Total Pages | : 357 |
Release | : 1997 |
Genre | : Surrealism |
ISBN | : 9780856674235 |
René Magritte
Author | : Sarah Whitfield |
Publisher | : |
Total Pages | : 357 |
Release | : 1997 |
Genre | : |
ISBN | : 9783909164592 |
René Magritte
Author | : René Magritte |
Publisher | : Philip Wilson Publishers, Limited |
Total Pages | : 388 |
Release | : 1997 |
Genre | : Art |
ISBN | : |
This is the fifth and final volume of the critically acclaimed catalogue raisonne of the Belgian surrealist artist Rene Magritte, edited by David Sylvester. This volume is the essential supplement to the series, including a 57 page index, a 155 page annotated bibliography (about 3,000 items), an exhibition list, a catalogue of commercial works and important revisions to the four earlier volumes, written by Sarah Whitfield and Michael Raeburn.As a whole, the series (Volumes I-V) presents an authoritative survey of the artist's oeuvre, from 1916 to his death in 1967. The text provides a systematic survey of his oil paintings (I-III), objects (II-III), bronzes (III), gouaches, temperas, watercolors and papiers colles (IV). Volume V completes the series that is widely recognized as an indispensable reference for Magritte scholars and admirers alike.
René Magritte
Author | : Catherine Defeyt |
Publisher | : Getty Publications |
Total Pages | : 122 |
Release | : 2023-08-15 |
Genre | : Art |
ISBN | : 1606068008 |
The first book-length material study of the works of Belgian Surrealist René Magritte. René Magritte (1898–1967) is the most famous Belgian artist of the twentieth century and a celebrated representative of the Surrealist movement. Much has been written about his practices, artistic community, and significance within the history of modernism, but little has been documented regarding his process. This volume examines fifty oil paintings made by Magritte between 1921 and 1967, now held at the Royal Museums of Fine Arts of Belgium. This technical study of his works using noninvasive scientific imaging and chemical analysis reveals the artist’s painting materials, his habit of overpainting previous compositions, and the origins and mechanisms of surface and pigment degradation. Of interest to conservators, scientists, curators, and enthusiasts of twentieth-century art, this book expands our understanding of Magritte the artist and provides new and useful findings that will inform strategies for the future care of his works.
René Magritte and the Art of Thinking
Author | : Lisa Lipinski |
Publisher | : Routledge |
Total Pages | : 321 |
Release | : 2019-04-04 |
Genre | : Art |
ISBN | : 1351626434 |
For René Magritte, painting was a form of thinking. Through paintings of ordinary objects rendered with illusionism, Magritte probed the limits of our perception—what we see and cannot see, the nature of representation—as a philosophical system for presenting ideas, and explored perspective as a method of visual argumentation. This book makes the claim that Magritte’s painting is about vision and the act of viewing, of perception itself, and the process of how we see and experience things in the world, including paintings as things.
René Magritte
Author | : Patricia Allmer |
Publisher | : |
Total Pages | : 270 |
Release | : 2009 |
Genre | : Art |
ISBN | : |
René Magritte offers a rethinking of Magritte's art from a position informed by contemporary developments in art theory. The book employs a wide range of literary and philosophical/cultural theoretical frameworks to analyze Magritte's art. It offers close readings of specific images, paying attention to neglected aspects of Magritte's work, discussing the significance of cabinets of curiosities and encyclopedias, trompe l'oeil, framing and forgeries. It addresses a range of intertextual relations between Magritte's work and that of other Surrealist artists and the art-historical tradition. This highly readable text explores how Magritte's art challenges conventional notions of originality, canonicity and coherence, revealing his work as being shaped by co-operations and co-options. It demonstrates that uncertainty, incoherence and negation lie at the core of Magritte's oeuvre.
Sacred Modern
Author | : Pamela G. Smart |
Publisher | : University of Texas Press |
Total Pages | : 295 |
Release | : 2010 |
Genre | : Art |
ISBN | : 0292723334 |
Renowned as one of the most significant museums built by private collectors, the Menil Collection in Houston, Texas, seeks to engage viewers in an acutely aesthetic, rather than pedagogical, experience of works of art. The Menil's emphasis on being moved by art, rather than being taught art history, comes from its founders' conviction that art offers a way to reintegrate the sacred and the secular worlds. Inspired by the French Catholic revivalism of the interwar years that recast Catholic tradition as the avant-garde, Dominique and John de Menil shared with other Catholic intellectuals a desire to reorder a world in crisis by imbuing modern cultural forms with religious faith, binding the sacred with the modern. Sacred Modern explores how the Menil Collection gives expression to the religious and political convictions of its founders and how "the Menil way" is being both perpetuated and contested as the Museum makes the transition from operating under the personal direction of Dominique de Menil to the stewardship of career professionals. Taking an ethnographic approach, Pamela G. Smart analyzes the character of the Menil aesthetic, the processes by which it is produced, and the sensibilities that it is meant to generate in those who engage with the collection. She also offers insight into the extraordinary impact Dominique and John de Menil had on the emergence of Houston as a major cultural center.
Abysmal
Author | : Gunnar Olsson |
Publisher | : University of Chicago Press |
Total Pages | : 568 |
Release | : 2010-03-15 |
Genre | : Science |
ISBN | : 0226629325 |
People rely on reason to think about and navigate the abstract world of human relations in much the same way they rely on maps to study and traverse the physical world. Starting from that simple observation, renowned geographer Gunnar Olsson offers in Abysmal an astonishingly erudite critique of the way human thought and action have become deeply immersed in the rhetoric of cartography and how this cartographic reasoning allows the powerful to map out other people’s lives. A spectacular reading of Western philosophy, religion, and mythology that draws on early maps and atlases, Plato, Kant, and Wittgenstein, Thomas Pynchon, Gilgamesh, and Marcel Duchamp, Abysmal is itself a minimalist guide to the terrain of Western culture. Olsson roams widely but always returns to the problems inherent in reason, to question the outdated assumptions and fixed ideas that thinking cartographically entails. A work of ambition, scope, and sharp wit, Abysmal will appeal to an eclectic audience—to geographers and cartographers, but also to anyone interested in the history of ideas, culture, and art.