Drawing Acts
Studies in Graphic Expression and Representation
£30.99
- Author: David Rosand, Columbia University, New York
- Date Published: November 2016
- availability: In stock
- format: Paperback
- isbn: 9781316637524
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Drawing Acts is about drawing, both as art and act. Taking the study of drawings beyond the traditional agenda of connoisseurship, David Rosand explores the significance of the making of drawings, the meaning in the line of the draftsman, and the recreative dimension of critical response. The book focuses on drawings by artists such as Leonardo da Vinci, Raphael, Michelangelo, Rembrandt, Piranesi, Tiepolo and Picasso, as well as on the history and theory of the medium itself. It seeks to establish new foundations for the criticism and appreciation of drawing, which is often considered the most revealing record of artistic creativity, offering the most direct expression of the artistic self.
Read more- Combines practical criticism and theory to explore the fuller phenomenology of drawing, and its significance as both art and act
- Examines individual drawings in detail, exploring the complexity of a single line
- Spans the full range of Western art history, demonstrating universally-held values of authorship and self expressions from antiquity to the present
Reviews & endorsements
'… this is a brilliant and penetrating book: learned, urbane, well-written … and above all informed by a deep, visual sensibility which makes his detailed analysis of individual works of art exceptionally full and compelling.' Apollo Magazine
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×Product details
- Date Published: November 2016
- format: Paperback
- isbn: 9781316637524
- length: 443 pages
- dimensions: 278 x 213 x 21 mm
- weight: 1.4kg
- availability: In stock
Table of Contents
1. Criticism, connoisseurship, and the phenomenology of drawing
2. Disegno: the invention of an art
3. The handwriting of the self: Leonardo da Vinci
4. Raphael and the calligraphy of classicism
5. Disegni a stampa: the printed line
6. Michelangelo: the urgent gesture
7. Rembrandt's reach
8. Capriccio: the antic line.
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