Bild på författaren.

Joan Mitchell (1) (1925–1990)

Författare till The Paintings of Joan Mitchell

För andra författare vid namn Joan Mitchell, se särskiljningssidan.

36+ verk 345 medlemmar 4 recensioner

Om författaren

Foto taget av: Joan Mitchell (1)

Verk av Joan Mitchell

The Paintings of Joan Mitchell (2002) 98 exemplar
Joan Mitchell (1997) 38 exemplar
Joan Mitchell : Pastel (1992) 13 exemplar
Joan Mitchell: Trees (2014) 12 exemplar
Joan Mitchell (2008) 10 exemplar
Joan Mitchell: The Last Decade (2010) 10 exemplar
Joan Mitchell 1992 (1993) 8 exemplar
My Five Years in the Country (1972) 2 exemplar

Associerade verk

In Memory Of My Feelings (1967) — Illustratör — 64 exemplar

Taggad

Allmänna fakta

Medlemmar

Recensioner

Joan Mitchell (1926-1992) was one of the few women among the first-rank Abstract Expressionist painters. She outpaced all but a handful of her male mentors and counterparts, while only Lee Krasner stands as a possible rival among her female counterparts. Although well regarded by critics, fellow artists, and the general public, Mitchell's achievement has never received full recognition; her work has not been shown in New York for more than twenty-five years. This exquisitely illustrated volume and the exhibition that it accompanies restore the artist to her rightful place in the history of American painting. Spanning Mitchell's entire career, from early works of 1951 until the year of her death, The Paintings of Joan Mitchell includes a wealth of breathtaking paintings, both intimate and grand in scale, that reveal Mitchell's fierce dedication to her art and reflect both the struggles and the artistic triumphs she achieved with her distinctive vision of Abstract Expressionism.

Jane Livingston draws on the artist's personal papers, including her journals and extensive correspondence, to provide an illuminating interpretation of the artist and her work. Linda Nochlin, who was a friend of Mitchell, discusses the artist's experience working in a field dominated by men. A third text by Whitney Curator Yvette Lee explores a distinctive and little-known suite of paintings entitled La Grande Vallée, created in 1983-84. Mounted with the full cooperation of the estate of Joan Mitchell, the exhibition contains many paintings rarely seen before--and in some cases never publicly exhibited. This book includes an exhibition history; an extensive artist bibliography of related monographs, reviews, and filmed interviews; and color plates and listing of all the works appearing in the exhibition.
… (mer)
 
Flaggad
petervanbeveren | 1 annan recension | Jan 18, 2021 |
"Lots of painters are obsessed with inventing something," American painter Joan Mitchell (1925–92) said in 1986. "When I was young, it never occurred to me to invent. All I wanted to do was paint." Throughout her life Mitchell remained committed to totally autonomous abstract painting, always driven by this fundamental love for the craft and technique of painting. In a career spanning more than four decades, Mitchell's painting style married the dynamic gesture of the Abstract Expressionists, her generational peers, to a keen sensitivity to natural phenomena such as light and water. Characterized by an intense color palette and fresh gestural energy, often applied on a very large scale, Mitchell’s paintings both sensually seduce and intellectually stimulate viewers.
Published to accompany a large-scale survey of Mitchell's painting, Joan Mitchell: Retrospective draws from Mitchell's entire oeuvre, from her early work of the 1950s to her late, multipart works painted in her last years. Both catalogue and exhibition insist on the importance of biography to any retrospective account of Mitchell’s work, and a large part of the exhibition is dedicated to the first extensive public presentation of archival materials from the Joan Mitchell Foundation. Photographs, correspondence and ephemera from the archives are reproduced here, along with an illustrated timeline that relates Mitchell's life to her work.
Born in Chicago in 1925, Joan Mitchell studied at Smith College before training at The Art Institute of Chicago. After a fellowship in Paris, Mitchell lived in New York, where she became part of the community of Abstract Expressionist painters. She spent increasing amounts of time in France, eventually moving to Paris in 1959, and remaining there until her death in 1992.
… (mer)
 
Flaggad
petervanbeveren | Jan 18, 2021 |
Joan Mitchell (1926-1992) was one of the most distinguished artists to be associated with the Abstract Expressionist movement. Winning a place for herself in the heavily male-dominated New York art world of the 1950s, she soon achieved recognition as a leading exponent of the gestural style. Yet her work is not as widely appreciated in the United States as it deserves to be, in part because she chose to live in France during the later decades of her life.
This volume is the first comprehensive presentation of Mitchell's work since her death. In her will, she directed that a longtime friend, Klaus Kertess, write the accompanying text. Kertess provides a richly textured account of Mitchell's life and work, tracing her evolution from her earliest efforts as a young artist in Chicago and her arrival in New York in the 1940s. He gives special attention to the array of gifted painters and poets in the legendary New York art scene of the 1950s, when Mitchell first made her mark, and discusses at length Mitchell's friendships with artists such as Willem de Kooning and Franz Kline and writers such as Frank O'Hara.

As an artist, Joan Mitchell's talents and significance were often overshadowed by the time and place of her work. While living in New York in the 1950s, for instance, she had to share a stage with such luminaries as Jackson Pollock and Willem de Kooning, a feat further complicated by her gender. Second, she chose to live in France for the last decades of her life, causing her to slip from the collective memory of most Americans. Regardless of this undeservedly diminished stature, Mitchell will go down in history as a leader of the Abstract Expressionist movement, leaving behind an impressive and influential body of work. Joan Mitchell is very much a labor of love, since, in her will, the artist asked her longtime friend Klaus Kertess to write the text for this collection, a task that he completes with style and skill. Along with revealing her personality and motivations, Kertess does an admirable job of detailing the impressive artistic circles Mitchell ran in while living in Chicago, New York, and Paris. This volume exhibits 120 pieces of her work, as well as a detailed and comprehensive biographical chronology that is sure to help jog some memories.

Review
Kertess ... does a wonderful job of re-creating the context in which Mitchell (1926-92) first made her mark…. It is the most complete study of her work to date. -- The New York Times Book Review, Robin Lippincott

About the Author
Klaus Kertess is Adjunct Curator for Drawings at the Whitney Museum of American Art, New York.
… (mer)
 
Flaggad
petervanbeveren | Dec 31, 2018 |
Joan Mitchell (1926-1992) was a leading Abstract Expressionist artist, and, with Lee Krasner, one of the movement's only women painters. Jane Livingston, curator of the accompanying traveling exhibition, uses Mitchell's personal papers to discuss the artist's life and career. Linda Nochlin writes on Mitchell's experience working in a predominantly male field.
 
Flaggad
zenosbooks | 1 annan recension | Sep 9, 2012 |

Du skulle kanske också gilla

Associerade författare

Statistik

Verk
36
Även av
1
Medlemmar
345
Popularitet
#69,185
Betyg
½ 4.5
Recensioner
4
ISBN
38
Språk
2

Tabeller & diagram