Explore the latest books of this year!
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Marco Livingstone

    Pop Art: A Continuing History
    Kienholz Tableau Drawings
    Andy Warhol : a retrospective
    Peter Blake
    Adrian Berg
    Hockney's People
    • Hockney's People

      • 240 pages
      • 9 hours of reading

      A beautifully illustrated overview of the portrait artistry of one of the world's most celebrated artists encompasses two hundred full-color reproductions of his superb paintings, including his depictions of Billy Wilder, Armistead Maupin, W. H. Auden, Henry Moore, Christopher Isherwood, and others who have played an important role in his life. 15,000 first printing.

      Hockney's People
      4.5
    • Adrian Berg

      • 248 pages
      • 9 hours of reading

      Exploring the full breadth of work by British artist Adrian Berg RA (1929-2011), and drawing heavily on the artist's personal archive, this book discusses Berg's meticulous engagement with the landscape which resulted in an impressive oeuvre created over a long career.00Embracing the figurative when abstraction was in the ascendancy, Berg's artistic mission was to push the boundaries of representative painting to discover new interpretations of familiar scenes. Accordingly, his paintings revisited particular places repeatedly ? most notably the view of Regent's Park from his studio window at Gloucester Gate.00Highly colourful and engagingly written, this book provides a long overdue appraisal and celebration of an artist who is key to the conversation around the development of British landscape painting, that most celebrated of British traditions.00Exhibition: Frestonian Gallery, London, UK (opening April 2020).

      Adrian Berg
      4.5
    • Peter Blake

      • 288 pages
      • 11 hours of reading

      This updated edition offers an extensive illustrated exploration of Peter Blake's life and artistic contributions, showcasing his significance in British art. It highlights his most notable works and provides insights into his creative process, making it an essential resource for fans and art enthusiasts alike.

      Peter Blake
      4.3
    • Kienholz Tableau Drawings

      • 145 pages
      • 6 hours of reading

      Drawings are conventionally thought of as handmade objects, on a flat surface, that can be hung on a wall. The works that Edward Kienholz termed drawings are, like his freestanding sculptures, assemblages of things found ready-made. They appeared as early as 1961, the year in which Kienholz produced the first of the room-sized sculptural tableaux that became synonymous with his name. The evolution of the drawings runs precisely parallel with that of the tableaux, stretching across the whole of his career, first as a sculptor working alone, and from 1972 in collaboration with his wife, Nancy Reddin Kienholz. Until now the drawings have been shown and reproduced only in relation to the large sculptures. This handsome book examines this central and major body of work and explores the concept of "drawings" as a studio process for the Kienholzes

      Kienholz Tableau Drawings
      3.5
    • Pop Art: A Continuing History

      • 271 pages
      • 10 hours of reading

      This comprehensive and critical history of pop art charts its international development, and describes and illustrates the work of over 130 artists, including Andy Warhol, Jasper Johns, Peter Blake, Claes Oldenburg, and Roy Lichtenstein

      Pop Art: A Continuing History
      3.8
    • Gilbert and George: Major Exhibition

      • 208 pages
      • 8 hours of reading

      Gilbert and George have become international art stars, exhibiting worldwide since the 1970s. Accompanying the retrospective exhibition of their work—which will travel to America in 2008— Gilbert & George is a unique introduction to these extraordinary artists.The book reproduces previously unpublished installations, drawings, and ephemera and includes original critical essays, an illustrated chronology and a bibliography designed by the artists.EXHIBITION Tate Modern, London, February 13–May 7, 2007de Young, San Francisco, February 15–May 4, 2008Milwaukee Art Museum, Milwaukee, June 6–August 31, 2008Brooklyn Museum, New York, September 2008–January 2009

      Gilbert and George: Major Exhibition
      3.7
    • David Hockney

      • 280 pages
      • 10 hours of reading

      The relationship between art and life has been of overriding importance in the work of David Hockney, who has perhaps enjoyed greater popularity than any other British artist this century. Here Marco Livingstone traces those connections from the beginning of the artist's career in the early 1960s through to the more recent works that have contributed to Hockney's international reputation. These include his photocollages and highly acclaimed stage designs for the opera, not to mention his embrace of technology - namely the fax drawings and color laser prints - which show the continuing preoccupation with invention and artifice that has made the artist's work at once popular and enduring.

      David Hockney
      3.9
    • Faces 1966-1984

      • 96 pages
      • 4 hours of reading

      Collects drawings of the British artist's family and friends and people such as Cecil Beaton, Stephen Spender, and Billy Wilder

      Faces 1966-1984
      3.4
    • Joe Tilson

      • 224 pages
      • 8 hours of reading

      Joe Tilson RA (b.1928) is one of the great figures in post-war British art and a pivotal artist of the British Pop Art movement during the 1960s. Still working, and still evolving, he has continued to explore many new directions and a great variety of mediums since moving away from his Pop origins. Astonishingly, no general monograph documenting all these phases of Tilson’ s prolific production has ever been published. This book remedies this through a series of insightful chapters, exploring each decade of the artist’ s career, written by Marco Livingstone, a respected authority on British contemporary art. Featuring a lively and visually rich design, this unique work will guide the reader through the evolution of one of the most distinctive voices in contemporary British art.

      Joe Tilson