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Location Call # Volume Status
 Sherman Library  N6853.B7 D36 2005    AVAILABLE  
Author Danchev, Alex.
Title Georges Braque : a life / Alex Danchev.
Edition First U.S. edition.
OCLC 55016549
ISBN 1559707437
9781559707435
Publisher New York : Arcade Pub., [2005]
©2005
Description xvi, 440 pages : illustrations (some color) ; 25 cm
LC Subject heading/s Braque, Georges, 1882-1963.
Other
Subject heading/s
Braque, Georges, 1882-1963.
LC Subject heading/s Artists -- France -- Biography.
Other
Subject heading/s
Artistes -- France -- Biographies.
Bibliography Includes bibliographical references (pages 373-411) and index.
Contents 'Everyone has his own coffee grounds': the apprentice -- 'Memories in anticipation': the confirmed painter -- 'But that's what a nose is like!': the white Negro -- 'Mon vieux Wilbourg': the encounter with Picasso -- 'I am Madame Braque': partnership and marriage -- "If I should die out there': the great war -- 'Tous les conforts, pas de téléphone': Braque-Chardin -- 'The hand that ponders and the eye that fashions': the studio -- 'Stricken by and seeking reality': the occupation -- 'Light like a bird': the solitaire -- 'The prong of the rake': late Braque -- 'I am here': master of the artless art.
Review "A pioneer of modern art and founder of Cubism, Georges Braque was one of the most important artists of the twentieth century. Yet, until now, the full story of his life has remained untold." "In this first full-length biography, Alex Danchev draws on a wealth of new sources to reveal a man who ushered in one of the greatest revolutions in art since the Renaissance." "Braque devoted his life to pushing the boundaries of the possible. Art critic Louis Vauxcelles coined the term Cubism while appraising Braque's landmark 1908 painting, Houses at L'Estaque, which Matisse later christened "really the first picture constituting the origin of Cubism." A few years later, in 1912, Braque pioneered the collage as fine art with the groundbreaking Fruit Dish and Glass. An internationally renowned painter, he was also a highly accomplished poet and philosopher - praised by Sartre and Heidegger. Braque also fought bravely in World War I. At the Battle of Somme, he sustained a serious skull fracture and nearly died." "But it was Braque's partnership with Picasso that bore the richest fruit and has become the stuff of legend. Lifelong friends and rivals, the two men assessed each other's work at every step, forging an artistic association that was intimate, intense, and profoundly influential. Together they struck down linear perspective, infusing art with a new freedom and excitement." "In this biography, Danchev explores Braque's creativity, examines his personal and professional relationships - with Beckett, Cezanne, Giacometti, Matisse, and Miro, among others - and enriches our understanding of an extraordinary fertile period in art history. Braque emerges as a bold innovator, a revolutionary genius, and a towering figure of modern art."--Jacket.
General note From the library of Eric M. Zafran
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