The New Figurative Art of David Park
Author: Paul Chadbourne Mills
Publisher:
Published: 1990
Total Pages: 127
ISBN-13: 9780884962953
DOWNLOAD EBOOKRead and Download eBook Full
Author: Paul Chadbourne Mills
Publisher:
Published: 1990
Total Pages: 127
ISBN-13: 9780884962953
DOWNLOAD EBOOKAuthor: Nancy Boas
Publisher: Univ of California Press
Published: 2012-03-17
Total Pages: 368
ISBN-13: 0520268415
DOWNLOAD EBOOKIn this beautifully illustrated biography, compiled from comprehensive and sweeping interviews, Nancy Boas traces Parks resolute search for a new kind of figuration, one that would penetrate abstract expressionisms thickly layered surfaces and infuse them with human presence.
Author: Caroline A. Jones
Publisher: Univ of California Press
Published: 1990
Total Pages: 258
ISBN-13: 9780520068421
DOWNLOAD EBOOK"Should be the classic, central, definitive work on the emergence of Bay Area Figurative painting."--Paul Mills, author of The New Figurative Painting of David Park
Author: Helen Park Bigelow
Publisher:
Published: 2009
Total Pages: 234
ISBN-13:
DOWNLOAD EBOOK--First full-length book in two decades devoted to the art and life of this important American artist. Includes more than 90 plates illustrating Park's development and career --Park's paintings have seen a resurgence of interest among collectors and institutions, with 2009 exhibitions at Washington's Phillips Collection and Stanford University's Cantor Arts Center; pieces recently auctioned for $2.7 million at Christie's and $1.4 million at Sotheby's David Park, Painter: Nothing Held Back chronicles the brief but remarkably prolific career of this American artist, who died in 1960 at age 49. He was an integral part of the San Francisco Bay art community from the early 1930s on, and is counted as one of the group of immensely gifted artists who made up the Bay Area Figurative Painting movement in its nascent years of the 1950s. A painter deeply committed to humanity as a subject in an era that exalted abstraction, Park's work can be startling for its depth of feeling even today. Writing about him recently, San Francisco critic Kenneth Baker noted: Park's freedom from irony will strike anyone sated by postmodernist flippancy as enviable and almost beyond achievement today.
Author: Janet Bishop
Publisher: University of California Press
Published: 2019-05-28
Total Pages: 220
ISBN-13: 0520304373
DOWNLOAD EBOOKThis generously illustrated volume is the first comprehensive publication devoted to the powerfully expressive work of David Park (1911–60). Best known as the founder of Bay Area Figurative art, Park moved from Boston to California at the age of seventeen and spent most of his adult life in and around San Francisco. In the immediate postwar years, like many avant-garde American artists, he engaged with Abstract Expressionism and painted non-objectively. In a moment of passion in 1949, he made the radical decision to abandon nearly all of his abstract canvases at the Berkeley city dump and return to the human figure, in so doing marking the beginning of the Bay Area Figurative movement. The astonishingly powerful paintings he made in the decade that followed brought together his long-held interest in classic subjects such as portraiture, domestic interiors, musicians, rowers, and bathers with lush, gestural paint handling and an extraordinary sense of color. In 1958–59 Park reached his expressive peak, reveling in the sensuous qualities of paint to create intensely physical, psychologically charged, and deeply felt canvases. This fertile period cut short by illness in 1960, Park transferred his creative energy to other mediums when he could no longer work on canvas. In the last months of his life, bedridden, he produced an extraordinary thirty-foot-long felt-tip-pen scroll and a poignant series of gouaches. Published to accompany the first major museum exhibition of Park’s work in more than thirty years, David Park: A Retrospective traces the full arc of the artist’s career, from his early social realist and cubist-inspired efforts of the 1930s to his mature figurative paintings of the 1950s and his astounding final works on paper. An overview of Park’s full body of work by Janet Bishop, SFMOMA’s Thomas Weisel Family Curator of Painting and Sculpture, will be joined by approximately ninety full-color plates of paintings and works on paper; an essay by Tara McDowell on the figure drawing sessions held by Park, Richard Diebenkorn, Elmer Bischoff, Frank Lobdell, and others in their studios starting in 1953; short essays on Park’s scroll, his gouaches, and the portraits that Imogen Cunningham and Park made of each other; and an illustrated chronology. Published in association with the San Francisco Museum of Modern Art. Exhibition schedule: Modern Art Museum of Fort Worth: June 2–September 8, 2019 Kalamazoo Institute of Arts: December 21, 2019–March 15, 2020 San Francisco Museum of Modern Art: April 11–September 7, 2020
Author: Timothy Anglin Burgard
Publisher: Yale University Press
Published: 2013-07-28
Total Pages: 258
ISBN-13: 0300190786
DOWNLOAD EBOOKA beautiful exploration of the pivotal years in Diebenkorn's career
Author: David Park
Publisher: Princeton University Press
Published: 2020-11-10
Total Pages: 488
ISBN-13: 0691221677
DOWNLOAD EBOOKThe description for this book, The How and the Why, will be forthcoming.
Author: Linda Patricia Cleary
Publisher:
Published: 2015-07-14
Total Pages:
ISBN-13: 9781320549431
DOWNLOAD EBOOKOne girl, one painting a day...can she do it? Linda Patricia Cleary decided to challenge herself with a year long project starting on January 1, 2014. Choose an artist a day and create a piece in tribute to them. It was a fun, challenging, stressful and psychological experience. She learned about technique, art history, different materials and embracing failure. Here are all 365 pieces. Enjoy!
Author: Paul Chadbourne Mills
Publisher:
Published: 1982
Total Pages: 314
ISBN-13:
DOWNLOAD EBOOKAuthor: David Park
Publisher: Chronicle Books (CA)
Published: 1989
Total Pages: 26
ISBN-13: 9780938491149
DOWNLOAD EBOOKBackground information on the artist accompanies the scroll in which he depicts his childhood memories of Boston