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R.B. Kitaj - Confessions Of An Old Jewish Painter [Kõva köide]

Introduction by , Edited by ,
  • Formaat: Hardback, 360 pages, kõrgus x laius: 230x150 mm
  • Ilmumisaeg: 10-Sep-2017
  • Kirjastus: Schirmer/Mosel Verlag GmbH
  • ISBN-10: 3829608136
  • ISBN-13: 9783829608138
  • Formaat: Hardback, 360 pages, kõrgus x laius: 230x150 mm
  • Ilmumisaeg: 10-Sep-2017
  • Kirjastus: Schirmer/Mosel Verlag GmbH
  • ISBN-10: 3829608136
  • ISBN-13: 9783829608138
R.B. Kitaj (1932–2007) is one of the most intriguing 20th century artists. Kitaj left behind a manuscript unmatched among 20th-century artist autobiographies — Confessions of an Old Jewish Painter. Eloquently describing his vices and sufferings, it stands in the traditions of both St. Augustine and Thomas de Quincey.

R.B. Kitaj (1932–2007) is one of the most intriguing 20th century artists. Born into a Russo-Jewish family near Cleveland, Ohio, 17-year old Kitaj spent 5 years at sea aboard a Norwegian freighter. He went on to study art in New York and Vienna. A Royal College of Art stipend made him move to London where he became a celebrated artist. Curating The Human Clay, a 1976 show of figurative contemporary British artists, he coined the term "School of London" for the artistic circle around Francis Bacon, Frank Auerbach, Lucian Freud, and Leon Kossoff. In 1991 he was elected a member of the Royal Academy, one of only three American painters to be thus honored in the history of the institution. A major 1994 retrospective at London’s Tate Gallery failed to produce Kitaj’s international breakthrough, but was unanimously panned by British critics instead. This, and the unexpected death of his wife Sandra, induced his increasingly paranoid perspective. Embittered he returned to the USA and settled in Los Angeles, where he finally took his own life in 2007. Kitaj left behind a manuscript unmatched among 20th-century artist autobiographies — Confessions of an Old Jewish Painter. Eloquently describing his vices and sufferings, it stands in the traditions of both St. Augustine and Thomas de Quincey. Now published for the first time, it is a sensation, from both a literary and art historical point of view.
Preface 7(12)
David Hockney
1 Childhood in Cleveland --- Education in Troy and on the High Seas --- Studies in New York and Vienna --- GI in Fontainebleau
19(28)
2 Oxford and Warburg
47(14)
3 Royal College of Art, London
61(22)
4 The American Painter in Swinging London
83(14)
5 You Can't Go Home Again --- Yet
97(12)
6 Whoring and Painting On My Perfect Day
109(8)
7 How To Start Becoming A Jewish Artist
117(12)
8 Berkley, California, 1968
129(14)
9 Man and Woman
143(3)
10 Hollywood
146(7)
11 Sandra
153(10)
12 62 Elm Park Road SW3
163(6)
13 The Jew Etc.
169(8)
14 Porridge Paper and Marynka
177(10)
15 The God Question
187(4)
16 Josep and Guimera
191(6)
17 The Human Clay
197(4)
18 The Six-Day-War
201(2)
19 I Can Draw Better Than Any Jew in History
203(6)
20 Another American Year
209(10)
21 Paris
219(18)
22 Summing Up At 50
237(5)
23 London Yet Again
242(13)
24 The Royal Academy
255(4)
25 Collecting
259(4)
26 Prelude To War (1990--1994)
263(5)
27 Sandringham / Isaiah Berlin
268(5)
28 Sandra Influences Me
273(2)
29 Tate War
275(26)
Manifesto "J'Accuse"
291(10)
30 "Oh Eclipse of My Sun!" Sandra's Death
301(8)
Letters of Condolence by Frank Auerbach and Leon Wieseltier
307(2)
31 Good-Bye London
309(8)
32 Los Angeles
317(4)
33 My Tinsel Jerusalem
321(8)
34 Oslo, Madrid, Vienna, Dusseldorf
329(4)
35 Kitaj in The Aura of Cezanne
333(12)
Epilogue
345(30)
Eckhart J. Gillen
Appendix
Biographical Notes
375(4)
R. B. Kitaj
Glossary --- Important Reference Figures in Kitaj's Life 379(8)
List of works 387(6)
Bibliography 393(4)
Acknowledgements 397