Martyn Brewster book by Vivienne Mary Light, Simon Olding Art History : Immediate dispatch from Somerset. Nice book in great condition. Pages in excellent condition. Images are beautiful bright and vivid. No notes or highlighting. See images. Fantastic book.

Format: Softcover

Author: Vivienne Mary Light, Simon Olding

ISBN: 9781859284391

Condition: Used - Very Good


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About the book >.>.> The art of Martyn Brewster takes its place within two great histories. The first is the grand and complex tradition of European Romantic and post-Romantic landscape painting. This contains within it (to identify elements that can be seen to have fed most directly into Brewster's work) the great and radical breakthroughs to expressivity of Turner and Constable, the densely atmospheric realism of Courbet, the brilliant efflor- escences of French Impressionism and post-Impressionism, including the late Monet of the lily pond paintings, and the psychologically-charged colourism of Northern artists such as Caspar David Friedrich, van Gogh, Nolde, and de Sta�l. The second is the dynamic and richly complicated phenomenon of post-war painterly abstraction, with its interplay of American and European developments, its spiritual and mythic pretensions on the one hand, its claims to expressive authenticity on another, its intent to a symbolic transformation of the visible world on a third, and its ambition, in all those cases, to achieve a self-contained objective autonomy. It is true, of course, that in some of its manifestations this latter line has grown out of the former, and that many of the under- lying themes that animated nineteenth- and early twentieth-century landscape painting have found their modern expression in non-figurative art. This is not to suggest that Brewster is essentially a landscape painter, for he has followed a resolutely principled course in non-figuration, making paintings (and prints) that insist upon their material self-sufficiency, so to speak, as objects in the world rather than as pictures of the world. But it is certainly the case that until recently there has persisted in his work a great deal of reference to natural phenomena, frankly registered in the titles he gives his paintings. (LL)