Rembrandt's Nose: Of Flesh & Spirit in the Master's PortraitsDistributed Art Publishers, 2007 - 167 pagina's The year 2006 marked the 400th anniversary of the birth of one of the greatest portrait painters that ever lived, the Dutch seventeenth-century master, Rembrandt. Although Rembrandt is among the most important artists in western history, and perhaps our greatest draftsman, no one has ever, until now, been able to pinpoint exactly how it was that he so precisely and effortlessly captured the spiritual essence of his subjects. This insightful, sophisticated and yet accessible illustrated reading-format study, written by the preeminent scholar and translator Michael Taylor, will be as enlightening and delightful to Rembrandt scholars as to lay readers. Taylor looks at Rembrandt's self-portraits, his society portraits, historical paintings and biblical scenes, and identifies how it was that the artist rendered his subjects so alive, so full of earthy, flesh-and-blood vitality--which all boils down to his treatment of the nose. Rembrandt's Nose is a gem of a book, an intimate, candid and extremely entertaining engagement with the works of art themselves, interwoven with racy historical snippets that contextualize the artist's breakthroughs and techniques. It includes some 49 reproductions, as well as a complete chronology of Rembrandt's life. "Michael Taylor creates a series of portraits that are as full of ingenuity, passion, and attention to quirky detail as Rembrandt's paintings themselves. Art history has seldom been so entertaining and enlightening." --Ross King, author of Brunelleschi's Dome, The Judgment of Paris, and Michelangelo & the Pope's Ceiling. "Michael Taylor's starting point for this enchanting essay is a feature that is as plain as could be, and is central to the destiny and the mortal features and aspirations of his great subject, the painter. Taylor's meditation unfolds with grace of language and insight, and a familiar use of what can be known now of Rembrandt and the world he revealed." --W.S. Merwin, former Chancellor of The Academy of American Poets and recipient of the National Book Award and the Pulitzer Prize. "Zooming in on the center of Rembrandt's faces, Michael Taylor finds meanings we all have missed. What appeals to me most in his lyrical appreciation is that he writes not only about what Rembrandt's noses look like, but also how they smell and breathe." --Gary Schwartz, author of The Rembrandt Book. "This is the best kind of criticism: informed without being pedantic, passionate but elegant, witty and earnest at the same time...It is worth a whole stack of weighty tomes on the master." --Mark Polizzotti, Publisher, The Museum of Fine Arts, Boston, and author of Revolution of the Mind: The Life of André Breton. |
Inhoudsopgave
Acknowledgments ས | 7 |
Without a Nose a Man Is No Longer a Man | 20 |
A Nose Like the Latex Stock of a Hollywood | 34 |
Copyright | |
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Alte Pinakothek Amsterdam Anatomy Lesson appear artist Artist's Father blind brush cheeks chin Christ Claudius Civilis collar Collection color composition Constantijn Huygens Cornelia dark daughter depicts drawing Dutch edge etching eyebrows eyes figure flesh forehead Frederik Hendrik gaze Geertje Gemäldegalerie gold chain Govert Flinck group portrait guilders Hague hair hand Hendrickje Stoffels Hermitage highlight Huygens inches Jan Lievens Jan Six Kenwood House Leiden light lips London look lust master Mauritshuis mouth Musée du Louvre Museum of Art National Gallery Nationalmuseum nose nostrils Oil on canvas Oil on wood painter palette Paris perhaps picture Pieter Lastman pigment Portrait of Nicolaes Rembrandt Rembrandt painted Rembrandt's father rendering ridge Rijksmuseum Samaritan Samson Saskia Self-Portrait Self-Portrait with Soft seventeenth-century shadows Simon Schama sitter sitter's face skin streaks studio texture tion Titia Titus Tobias Tobit tronie Tulp Uylenburgh viewer wrinkled Young Woman