Bibliography:
Judy Sund
ISBN: 9780521410809 Publisher: Cambridge Univ Pr Publication Date: 1992 Binding:
Hardcover
Synopsis: Van Goghs fascination with contemporary literature has never been studied as comprehensively as it is in this book, which includes an analysis of Van Goghs reading habits. The author demonstrates that the Dutch painter considered modern French literature the epitome of cutting edge cultural production, and argues that the work and pronouncements of the writers he most admired--Zola, Maupassant, Daudet, and the Goncourt brothers--informed his notion of modernism by providing mental entree into the world of the Parisian avant-garde. The painters production and his predilection for Naturalist prose are shown to be decisively linked and mutually reinforcing. Though Van Gogh believed reading was a matter of importance that greatly influenced one's work, he resolutely avoided the anecdotal and illustrational in his art. Nonetheless, his oeuvre is marked by his literary pursuits, and this book reveals the multiple and often subtle ways in which nonnarrative imagery evokes beloved texts. It contributes to the investigation of artistic correspondance in the late nineteenth century, and explodes prevailing assumptions by exploring the allusive, Symbolist dimensions of naturalist practice.
More About this Book |
View All Listings |
View Collectible Listings
Other editions:
Softcover - 2002,
Hardcover - 2000
|
More Judy Sund Books:
Portions of this page may be (c) 2006 Muze Inc. Some database content may also be provided by Baker & Taylor Inc. Copyright 1995-2006 Muze Inc. For personal non-commercial use only. All rights reserved. Content for books is owned by Baker & Taylor, Inc. or its licensors and is subject to copyright and all other protections provided by applicable law.
Portions of this page may be Copyright VNU Entertainment Media (UK) Ltd., 2006, Georg Lingenbrink GmbH & Co., Tite Live, S.A or Informazioni Editoriali S.p.A. All rights reserved.