The Matter of Still Life : Between Chardin and Morandi
The Matter of Still Life : Between Chardin and Morandi
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Author(s): Armstrong, Carol
ISBN No.: 9780520416994
Pages: 148
Year: 202606
Format: Trade Cloth (Hard Cover)
Price: $ 68.93
Dispatch delay: Dispatched between 7 to 15 days
Status: Available (Forthcoming)

"Carol Armstrong's rich and evocative essays will expand the way we think about still life. Through thickly descriptive language, painted things come alive even as they may remain poignantly mute. With a keen eye and exacting prose, Armstrong conjures the inner worlds of represented objects, evincing their deep material agency and generative possibilities."--Marni Reva Kessler, author of Discomfort Food: The Culinary Imagination in Late Nineteenth-Century French Art " The Matter of Still Life tackles the difficult and elusive nature of descriptive writing that argues for humility in presentness. It is a beautifully written, poetic volume that seamlessly integrates sociohistorical contexts into its poetic close looking."--Jenni Sorkin, Professor and Chair, History of Art and Architecture, University of California, Santa Barbara "This book offers an exceptionally eloquent and sophisticated meditation on a topic that forms the very foundations of the practice of art history, namely, the complex relationships between pictures and words. It is most fitting that an art historian with an exquisitely compelling and utterly unique manner of writing about art and whose truly remarkable ability to make very close, careful looking into the most meaningful of interpretations should take on this subject."--Michelle Foa, author of Georges Seurat: The Art of Vision "Armstrong brings a powerful combination of historical erudition, critical intelligence, visual acuity, and tactile sensitivity.


She undergirds penetrating visual analysis with relevant information, never losing sight of the goal of explaining in clear language why and how we should devote the closest attention to these apparently humble works of art."--Stephen Ellis, Director, LeRoy E. Hoffberger School of Painting, Maryland Institute College of Art.


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