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Degas landscapes Richard Kendall

By: Material type: TextTextPublication details: New Haven London Yale University Press in association with The Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York and The Museum of Fine Arts, Houston 1993ISBN:
  • 0300058624
  • 0300058373
Subject(s): DDC classification:
  • 759.4 DEG
Holdings
Item type Current library Call number Status Date due Barcode
Standard Loan LSAD Library Main Collection 759.4 DEG (Browse shelf(Opens below)) Available 39002000113648

Enhanced descriptions from Syndetics:

"Degas is renowned for his masterful studies of the human body - powerfully rendered paintings of dancers, jockeys, washerwomen and bathers. It is less well known, however, that he also produced challenging and varied landscapes at almost every phase of his career - from his early travels in Italy, to his association with the Impressionist movement, and into his final decades. Remarkably, Degas chose the subject of landscape for his only one-person show in 1892." "This lavishly illustrated book by Richard Kendall is the first to deal with Degas' landscapes, relating them to his other work and to his evolving views of art. Kendall demolishes the myth of Degas' indifference to the landscape itself and to the painters of landscape art. He traces Degas' first experiments in watercolour, oil and etching; his progress as a painter of equestrian scenes and pastel seascapes in the 1860s; and his association with Pissarro, Cassatt and Gauguin and rivalry with Monet and Cezanne in the middle of his career. Kendall provides a detailed examination of Degas' audacious colour monotypes from the early 1890s, showing how they reveal the artist's engagement with contemporary colour printing, his interest in Japanese art, his involvement with symbolism and his affinity for contemporary philosophy and literature. He concludes by discussing the last flowering of Degas' landscape activity - the little-known series of paintings produced at Saint-Valery-sur-Somme in the late 1890s - and with the help of photographic evidence proves that these pictures relate directly to surviving streets and buildings, often in radical and innovative ways." "Handsomely illustrated with many previously unpublished works, this book demonstrates that Degas had an affectionate, original and complex relationship with the landscape, a relationship that has profound implications for his more familiar repertoire of subjects."--BOOK JACKET.Title Summary field provided by Blackwell North America, Inc. All Rights Reserved

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