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7 of 7 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
The End of Landscape,
By A Customer
This review is from: A Sense of Place: The Artist And The American Land (Hardcover)
A SENSE OF PLACE links the human with the natural: people make, and are made by, parts of our earth. Landscape artist and conservationist Alan Gussow has organized 63 well-chosen colorplates reminding us that paintings record the known landscape, the unknown frontier and what might be forgotten once nature and people meet. The book is a beautiful way to get to know the names in landscape art and see how the United States has changed over time: late 16th-century John White's "Indians fishing" in the Virginia colony organized by Sir Walter Raleigh; early 19th-century Thomas Cole's "Landscape with dead trees" and George Catlin's "Prairie meadows burning - Upper Missouri"; mid-19th century stained glass window specialist John LaFarge's "Bishop Berkeley's rock"; late 19th-century David Howard Hitchcock's glowing "Halemaumau" volcano; early 20th-century Marsden Hartley's rambunctious "Smelt Brook Falls" and Charles Sheeler's precise "Rocks at Steicher's"; mid-20th-century Edward Hopper's "Cobb's house" on comfortable Cape Cod and Georgia O'Keeffe's elegant "Sky above clouds II"; and late 20th-century Sidney Goodman's chilling "Landscape with 4 towers" and Anne Poor's delicate "Gertrude's bouquet." Readers get more specifics from William Gaunt's TURNER, Patricia Junker's JOHN STEUART CURRY, and Bernard B. Perlman's PAINTERS OF THE ASHCAN SCHOOL. It also is interesting to do comparison reading into Paul Machotka's CEZANNE and Richard Thomson's CAMILLE PISSARRO.
5.0 out of 5 stars
Landscape artists anthology,
By James (Indianapolis, IN United States) - See all my reviews
Amazon Verified Purchase(What's this?)
This review is from: A Sense of Place: The Artist And The American Land (Hardcover)
"A Sense of Place" is a beautifully illustrated anthology coffee table book of America's greatest living and past landscape artists covering first contact through the 1970s. Each colored reproduction is paired with a page of text about and/or by the artist. It is easy to read for those not familiar with art history jargon. There are other great scholarly works about the history of landscape painting in general such as Kenneth Clark's "Landscape into Art" which has excellent analysis and commentary but very poor b/w reproductions and Malcolm Andrew's "Landscape and Western Art" which frames European and American landscape art in a much different way and addresses it's practice from a much different philosophical perspective. But, for the money, this is my first pick.
0 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
A Sense of Place,
This review is from: A Sense of Place: The Artist And The American Land (Hardcover)
The Book arrived quickly was in the exact condition as described. Very happy with this seller and the product.
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A Sense of Place: The Artist And The American Land by Alan Gussow (Hardcover - November 1, 1997)
Used & New from: $9.00
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