Ralph Albert Blakelock by Abraham Davidson (1996, Hardcover)

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About this product

Product Identifiers

PublisherPennsylvania STATE University Press
ISBN-100271015047
ISBN-139780271015040
eBay Product ID (ePID)101186

Product Key Features

Number of Pages254 Pages
LanguageEnglish
Publication NameRalph Albert Blakelock
SubjectHistory / Modern (Late 19th Century to 1945), Criticism & Theory, Artists, Architects, Photographers, History / General
Publication Year1996
TypeTextbook
AuthorAbraham Davidson
Subject AreaArt, Biography & Autobiography
FormatHardcover

Dimensions

Item Height0.8 in
Item Weight32.1 Oz
Item Length11 in
Item Width8.5 in

Additional Product Features

Intended AudienceScholarly & Professional
LCCN95-020627
Dewey Edition20
Reviews"Davidson has written the first true, full-length monograph on an artist who was one of America's best-known painters at the turn of the 20th century." -Choice, &"Blakelock is an artist who provides a fascinating excursion around the major schools and traditions of American painting of the late nineteenth and early twentieth century. His purpose is to bring to light a significant but relatively neglected artist through meticulous analysis of his life and paintings, as well as the literary, sociological, psychological, and even religious phenomena which might have served as an inspiration. Abraham Davidson has made an excellent job of the difficult task of combining biography and artistic analysis.&" &-Jeanne Chenault Porter, Penn State University, &"Davidson has written the first true, full-length monograph on an artist who was one of America&'s best-known painters at the turn of the 20th century.&" &-Choice, "Blakelock is an artist who provides a fascinating excursion around the major schools and traditions of American painting of the late nineteenth and early twentieth century. His purpose is to bring to light a significant but relatively neglected artist through meticulous analysis of his life and paintings, as well as the literary, sociological, psychological, and even religious phenomena which might have served as an inspiration. Abraham Davidson has made an excellent job of the difficult task of combining biography and artistic analysis." -Jeanne Chenault Porter, Penn State University, "Blakelock is an artist who provides a fascinating excursion around the major schools and traditions of American painting of the late nineteenth and early twentieth century. His purpose is to bring to light a significant but relatively neglected artist through meticulous analysis of his life and paintings, as well as the literary, sociological, psychological, and even religious phenomena which might have served as an inspiration. Abraham Davidson has made an excellent job of the difficult task of combining biography and artistic analysis." --Jeanne Chenault Porter, Penn State University
IllustratedYes
Dewey Decimal759.13
SynopsisWhile Ralph Albert Blakelock (1847-1919) appears in every major survey of American art, no current books exist on his life and work. In this comprehensive study, Abraham Davidson argues convincingly that Blakelock is one of the greatest American painters of the nineteenth century, whose art ranges from the "romantic visionary" school reminiscent of Albert Pinkham Ryder to, later in his tragic life, a more realistic, physically experimental style often touching on abstraction. Davidson examines the haunting influences of Blakelock's visits to the American West and the Caribbean while a young man, reflected in his strikingly original landscapes. He also explores Blakelock's connections to various American movements, including the Hudson River School, the Barbizon School, and Tonalism, and discusses the works he produced while institutionalized for schizophrenia for much of the last twenty years of his life. More than 150 black-and-white and color illustrations reproduce many of Blakelock's paintings for the first time. Drawing upon previously inaccessible biographical materials, including family letters and the artist's travel notes, Davidson pays special attention to the pre- and post-1880s and 1890s periods of Blakelock's work, practically unknown until this study. Despite being confined to an asylum in 1899, he continued to paint amazingly diverse landscapes on bits of cardboard or paper, often with brushes fashioned from bits of tree bark or his own hair. These later works "attest above all to Blakelock's quiet, almost joyous attention to nature. . . . and] evoke the places and vistas that sustained him], enabling him to pursue and even develop his vision, despite the odds" ( New York Times ). This important book restores Blakelock to his rightful place as a major contributor to the art of his period and to the development of American painting in general., While Ralph Albert Blakelock (1847-1919) appears in every major survey of American art, no current books exist on his life and work. In this comprehensive study, Abraham Davidson argues convincingly that Blakelock is one of the greatest American painters of the nineteenth century, whose art ranges from the "romantic visionary" school reminiscent of Albert Pinkham Ryder to, later in his tragic life, a more realistic, physically experimental style often touching on abstraction. Davidson examines the haunting influences of Blakelock's visits to the American West and the Caribbean while a young man, reflected in his strikingly original landscapes. He also explores Blakelock's connections to various American movements, including the Hudson River School, the Barbizon School, and Tonalism, and discusses the works he produced while institutionalized for schizophrenia for much of the last twenty years of his life. More than 150 black-and-white and color illustrations reproduce many of Blakelock's paintings for the first time. Drawing upon previously inaccessible biographical materials, including family letters and the artist's travel notes, Davidson pays special attention to the pre- and post-1880s and 1890s periods of Blakelock's work, practically unknown until this study. Despite being confined to an asylum in 1899, he continued to paint amazingly diverse landscapes on bits of cardboard or paper, often with brushes fashioned from bits of tree bark or his own hair. These later works "attest above all to Blakelock's quiet, almost joyous attention to nature. . . . [and] evoke the places and vistas that sustained [him], enabling him to pursue and even develop his vision, despite the odds" (New York Times). This important book restores Blakelock to his rightful place as a major contributor to the art of his period and to the development of American painting in general.
LC Classification NumberND237.B6D36 1996
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