Librería: Eureka Books, Eureka, CA, Estados Unidos de America
EUR 45,10
Cantidad disponible: 1 disponibles
Añadir al carritoHardcover. Estado de la sobrecubierta: Very Good. 107 pages. One of 3500 copies. Published on the occasion of the exhibit of the same name held May 2 - August 15, 2002 at Knoedler & Company in New York. A very good copy in a very good dust jacket. Some spotting to the cloth edges and the jacket verso. In the summer of 1957, Milton Avery, Adolph Gottlieb and Mark Rothko renewed a friendship that had begun in the late 1920s. All three were in Provincetown, on Cape Cod in Massachusetts, in the light and by the sea, and over the next few extraordinary summers they interacted, and advanced and accelerated radical new ideas in their individual bodies of work. The Provincetown summers witnessed Avery's largest and most abstract paintings, such as "Sunset Sea" of 1958, and the development of new directions in Gottlieb's work, including his 1957 paintings "Blast II" and "Blue at Night." This same time marked the darkening of Rothko's palette and, in 1958, the birth of the new forms found in the Seagram Murals and the later paintings of of the Harvard commission. Coming to Light is the first publication and exhibition to focus on the works of this period by each artist.