Product Information
Born near Minsk in White Russia, the painter Chaim Soutine (1894-1943) created his major works in France between the two World Wars. He is identified with the School of Paris, the group of artists, many of them foreign-born and Jewish, who lived and worked in the French capital between the wars. Known as a painter's painter , Soutine worked with unreserved gesture and emotion, using exuberant colour, thinkly applied paint, and sweeping brushwork. Chaim Soutine is a comprehensive, ground-breaking book that rediscovers this important artist, providing an overview of his life, work and aesthetic influence, as well as his critical reception. Essays by leading scholars and curators assess Soutine's art from new vantage points, including the changing critical reception of his work in Paris between the wars, as well as in the US and France in the aftermath of World War II and the Holocaust. The essays also examine the influence of Soutine's Jewish and French immigrant background on his work and reception, and introduce us to his important patrons and major collectors. These included Albert Barnes, the famous Philadelphia collector, who discovered Soutine's work in 1922-23 and purchased 52 of his paintings. The book features presentations and information never published before, including a photo-essay composed of rare photographs of the artist, newly discovered correspondence between Soutine and the French art historian Elie Faure, and the first radiographic analysis of the artist's work, which brings to light new evidence about Soutine's use of materials and his process of painting.Product Identifiers
PublisherPrestel
ISBN-139783791319322
eBay Product ID (ePID)91727611
Product Key Features
Book TitleAn Expressionist in Paris: the Paintings of Chaim Soutine
AuthorNorman L. Kleeblatt, Kenneth E. Silver
FormatHardcover
LanguageEnglish
Publication Year1998
Number of Pages200 Pages
Dimensions
Item Height300mm
Item Width230mm
Additional Product Features
EditorNorman L. Kleeblatt, Kenneth E. Silver
Country/Region of ManufactureGermany