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ISBN: PB: 9781606066065

Getty Publications

June 2019

103 pp.

25x15 cm

colour illus.

PB:
£14,99
QTY:

Categories:

On Modern Beauty

Three Paintings by Manet, Gauguin, and Cezanne

As the discipline of art history has moved away from connoisseurship, the notion of beauty has become increasingly problematic. Both culturally and personally subjective, the term is difficult to define and nearly universally avoided. In this insightful book, Richard R. Brettell, one of the leading authorities on Impressionism and French art of the nineteenth and early twentieth centuries, dares to confront the concept of modern beauty head-on. This is not a study of aesthetic philosophy, but rather a richly contextualised look at the ambitions of specific artists and artworks at a particular time and place. Brettell shapes his manifesto around three masterworks from the collection of the J. Paul Getty Museum: Edouard Manet's "Jeanne" (Spring), Paul Gauguin's "Arii Matamoe" (The Royal End) and Paul Cezanne's "Young Italian Woman at a Table". The provocative and wide-ranging discussion reveals how each of these exceptional paintings, though depicting very different subjects-a fashionable actress, a severed head and a weary working woman-enacts a revolutionary, yet enduring, icon of beauty.

About the Author

Richard R. Brettell is the Founding Director of the Edith O'Donnell Institute of Art History and the Margaret McDermott Chair of Aesthetic Studies.