by Fred R. Kline ‧ RELEASE DATE: May 15, 2016
Kline has a sharp eye, excellent memory, and top-notch research skills, creating a book that any art lover will love.
An artist, art historian, and dealer chronicles his discovery of the first drawing by Leonardo da Vinci to be uncovered in more than a century—as well as other adventures from this “art explorer.”
Kline can proudly point to a long list of his fantastic finds, from small shops to great auction houses. Here, he begins with two miracles. The first was rediscovering his previous love more than 20 years later. The second was a drawing that he proved to be authored by Baldassare Peruzzi, which they eventually sold to Christie’s for $66,000. The biggest story, however, was the holy child drawing he spotted in a Christie’s catalog, attributed to Annibale Carracci, that he bought for $1,700. The author’s eidetic memory is his greatest asset, and he spotted what he was sure was a da Vinci. His exhaustive detective work included testing the paper, the timing of the artist’s use of sfumato and red chalk, and the discovery of da Vinci’s sepia ink outlining. These and other insights backed up his assurance that this particular holy child was the model for da Vinci’s Benois Madonna and Madonna of the Carnation. That coup is enough to make a great story for any mystery or art history lover, but Kline does this for a living. He spots a work, buys it, and begins his research while investing in restoration to expose clues. One restorer, beginning to clean a work, erased the signature, sending the author into apoplexy. However, it turned out that the signature was false, added later. Further triumphs included the author’s $100 purchase of La Virgencita del Nuevo Mundo, a 16th-century stone statue from Mexico that proved to be “a first Virgin Mary of the Americas, a first new deity of the New World. She symbolized the first Indians baptized into a transformed Christianity.” The author narrates these and other adventures in art with aplomb.
Kline has a sharp eye, excellent memory, and top-notch research skills, creating a book that any art lover will love.Pub Date: May 15, 2016
ISBN: 978-1-60598-979-2
Page Count: 384
Publisher: Pegasus
Review Posted Online: May 3, 2016
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by Marvin Heiferman & Carole Kismaric ‧ RELEASE DATE: Oct. 3, 1994
An ambitious, glossy, consumer-friendly package that has a wide range of people commenting on photographs that have affected their lives. Heiferman and Kismaric run Lookout Books, a producer of popular photography titles (notably, William Wegman's children's series). Here, they interview some 69 individuals—celebrities, artists, laypeople—after having asked each to choose an image he or she finds powerful. Works of photojournalism, from the old Life magazine in particular, awoke feelings in many. G. Gordon Liddy tells of having a gut reaction at age 11 to a stark WW II image of dead Marines washed up on a New Guinea beach. Benjamin Spock speaks of being shocked to pacifist activism by Nick Ut's 1972 shot of children fleeing a napalm strike in Vietnam. From the other side of the camera, lensman Eddie Adams walks readers through a graphic account of how he happened upon his Vietnam-era picture of the execution of a Vietcong lieutenant. Elsewhere, art photographers such as Bruce Weber, Duane Michals, and Mary Ellen Mark weigh in, personalizing aspects of their craft. Celebrities contribute also, and strive not to sound vapid. These include: Ginger Rogers, Joan Rivers, Tony Bennett, Dennis Hopper, and Naomi Campbell. More lively are the views of everyday folks. Rock fan Gina Greco nimbly explains the ``wild monster'' appeal she finds in a portrait of Guns N' Roses lead singer Axl Rose. For some, family snapshots are the most emotionally loaded, as with convict Aida Rivera, whose HIV-positive sister Yvette poses proudly with her children, presaging her death. Other inclusions run the gamut—high-tech scientific studies, snapshots, advertising imagery, film stills, pornography. The book will accompany a traveling exhibition, which opens at New York's International Center of Photography this fall. Its contents are also being issued on CD-ROM. A slick and calculated crowd-pleaser of a project that ably pits fine art against popular culture.
Pub Date: Oct. 3, 1994
ISBN: 0-8118-0382-1
Page Count: 224
Publisher: Chronicle Books
Review Posted Online: May 19, 2010
Kirkus Reviews Issue: Aug. 1, 1994
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edited by Douglas W. Druick ‧ RELEASE DATE: Oct. 1, 1994
Meticulous research by an international team of scholars, complemented by magnificently reproduced illustrations, creates an impressive portrait of the fin-de-siäcle French artist Odilon Redon (18401916). Although Redon was once ranked with artists like Seurat and Gauguin, he has lately received less attention than his peers—a situation that the current retrospective at the Art Institute of Chicago, which this volume explicates, should help redress. Redon is best remembered today for his visionary monochromatic prints and drawings. Among his most frequently exhibited pictures are such fantastic dream images as an eye set within an ascending balloon and a giant smiling spider poised at a jaunty angle. Many public collections also display colorful pastel drawings of flower bouquets from the latter part of his career. It has proven difficult to explain his work according to the grand narratives of art history. Redon was neither an impressionist nor a modernist; even the label of symbolist threatens to assimilate his works to literature and philosophy rather than grant them the independence that their singularity demands. The authors, led by the Art Institute's Druick, recontextualize Redon by carefully unraveling his relationship to the romantic esthetics, spiritualist theologies, and art-market imperatives of his time, while offering a convincing psychoanalytic account of how his art reflects his unhappy childhood, his difficult apprenticeship, and his struggle to emerge from the shadow of his talented elder brother. Dark clouds and landscapes from his early life mark his noirs, they argue, but dissolve to reveal the no less mysterious, but finally joyous, light and color of his last decades. Many heretofore unknown full-color images brought to light by their investigations give a fuller sense of the development of themes in this late period. A superb art book for aficionados of occult ideas, of the graphic arts, or simply of striking images and effusive colors.
Pub Date: Oct. 1, 1994
ISBN: 0-8109-3769-7
Page Count: 464
Publisher: Abrams
Review Posted Online: May 19, 2010
Kirkus Reviews Issue: Aug. 15, 1994
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