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The 18th-century rococo artist Jean-Antoine Watteau is art critic Perl's favorite painter, one who transforms "powerful feelings-of love, friendship, lust, avidity, curiosity-into delectable artistic play" and "poetic pattern." Perl's exquisitely composed study is organized alphabetically; from "Actors" and "Art-for-Art's Sake" to "Zeuxis," and each chapter involves a theme, individual or movement related to Watteau. There are many delightful surprises, even to the reader familiar with the artist's oeuvre; Perl illuminates the links between Watteau's Harlequins and Pierrots and Beckett's characters, "so clownish and so heartrending." His entry on "Flirtation" expands this theme, ubiquitous in Watteau's paintings, into a profound commentary on love and metamorphosis. Perl's essays on Watteau's most famous works, The Pilgrimage to the Isle of Cythera and Gersaint's Shopsign, are equally inspired; Cythera displays what for Perl are Watteau's most poignant themes: the confounding of one's own emotions and the "elegant chaos" of the mind's consistently contradictory nature. Perl, art critic for the New Republic, has written a carefully researched, book of rare beauty and provocation. 44 illus. (Sept. 19)
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Posted April 24, 2010
Excellent and fun and clever. Very glad I own it.
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Posted May 27, 2010
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Overview
Antoine Watteau, one of the most mysterious painters who ever lived, is the inspiration for this delightful investigation of the tangled relationship between art and life. Weaving together historical fact and personal reflections, the influential art critic Jed Perl reconstructs the amazing story of this pioneering bohemian artist who, although he died in 1721, when he was only thirty-six, has influenced innumerable painters and writers in the centuries since—and whose work continues to deepen our understanding of the place that love, friendship, and pleasure have in our daily lives.Perl creates an astonishing experience by gathering his reflections on...