The Artist's Voice: Talks With Seventeen Modern Artists
To quote Robert Hughes, "All critics concerned with American painting will be Kuh's debtors from now on." Interviewed in the 1960s, the painters and sculptors Katharine Kuh spoke with provide insights into their work that remain illuminating and relevant. The author allows the artists to comment — in their own words — on their inspirations, philosophies, and creative processes and to debunk common myths about their work. Sometimes the results are surprising: abstract painter Josef Albers confesses to being a realist, while realist painter Ivan Albright firmly denies the charge. Marcel Duchamp professes surprise over the controversy stirred by his Nude Descending a Staircase, and Edward Hopper insists that his supposed themes of loneliness and nostalgia are entirely unintentional.
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The Artist's Voice: Talks With Seventeen Modern Artists
To quote Robert Hughes, "All critics concerned with American painting will be Kuh's debtors from now on." Interviewed in the 1960s, the painters and sculptors Katharine Kuh spoke with provide insights into their work that remain illuminating and relevant. The author allows the artists to comment — in their own words — on their inspirations, philosophies, and creative processes and to debunk common myths about their work. Sometimes the results are surprising: abstract painter Josef Albers confesses to being a realist, while realist painter Ivan Albright firmly denies the charge. Marcel Duchamp professes surprise over the controversy stirred by his Nude Descending a Staircase, and Edward Hopper insists that his supposed themes of loneliness and nostalgia are entirely unintentional.
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The Artist's Voice: Talks With Seventeen Modern Artists

The Artist's Voice: Talks With Seventeen Modern Artists

by Katherine Kuh
The Artist's Voice: Talks With Seventeen Modern Artists

The Artist's Voice: Talks With Seventeen Modern Artists

by Katherine Kuh

Paperback(1 DA CAPO)

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Overview

To quote Robert Hughes, "All critics concerned with American painting will be Kuh's debtors from now on." Interviewed in the 1960s, the painters and sculptors Katharine Kuh spoke with provide insights into their work that remain illuminating and relevant. The author allows the artists to comment — in their own words — on their inspirations, philosophies, and creative processes and to debunk common myths about their work. Sometimes the results are surprising: abstract painter Josef Albers confesses to being a realist, while realist painter Ivan Albright firmly denies the charge. Marcel Duchamp professes surprise over the controversy stirred by his Nude Descending a Staircase, and Edward Hopper insists that his supposed themes of loneliness and nostalgia are entirely unintentional.

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780306809057
Publisher: Hachette Books
Publication date: 01/14/2000
Edition description: 1 DA CAPO
Pages: 272
Product dimensions: 6.50(w) x 8.25(h) x (d)

About the Author

Katharine Kuh (1904-1994) was the first curator of modern painting and sculpture at the Art Institute of Chicago, an art editor of the Saturday Review, and the author of Lér, Art Has Many Faces, Break-Up: The Core of Modern Art, and The Open Eye: In Pursuit of Art.

Table of Contents

Foreword to the 1999 EditionVII
List of IllustrationsIX
Introduction3
Josef Albers11
Ivan Albright23
Alexander Calder39
Stuart Davis52
Edwin Dickinson69
Marcel Duchamp81
Naum Gabo94
Morris Graves105
Hans Hofmann118
Edward Hopper131
Franz Kline143
Jacques Lipchitz155
Isamu Noguchi171
Georgia O'Keeffe189
Ben Shahn204
David Smith219
Mark Tobey235
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