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ISBN: HB: 9780300104127

Yale University Press

February 2006

256 pp.

25.6x19.2 cm

60 colour images, 60 black&white illus.

HB:
£45,00
QTY:

Picasso

Architecture and Vertigo

The starting point of this exciting new exploration of Picasso is not his life but his work, which is revealed as a series of interventions in the troubled history of early twentieth-century Europe. Christopher Green shows how these interventions are remarkable for the force with which they confront issues that remain vital and important for us today: race, cultural difference, modernity, sexuality and the discontents of civilization. The framework for Green's exploration is simple, yet enormously rich in its implications: the compulsion found in Picasso's work simultaneously to build architectures and to release himself from them. Architecture is used by Green to refer not merely to pictorial or sculptural structure, but to the architecture of knowledge and society: the structures of tradition, of racial, social and cultural distinction, of logic and of technology. He not only develops new ways of seeing the oscillation between order and disorder in Picasso's work, but moves outwards from it to reveal how it confronted and challenged the architectures of orthodoxy. The book opens with a completely fresh look at the Demoiselles d'Avignon in relation to late nineteenth- and early twentieth-century theories of racial difference, and closes with Picasso's confronting the question of race even more directly in 1933, on the threshold of the Holocaust. The intervening chapters focus on the artist's early Cubism, his metal guitars of 1912 and 1924, and the work he made alongside the Surrealists and their dissident opponents in contexts that open up the question of the avant-garde's relation to modern society, to national identity, to modernity and to the place of magic in a modern, demystified world. Each of these chapters, moreover, places the work in a different avant-garde context by bringing in one of the artists closest to Picasso in the period, thereby introducing new paths into the work not only of Picasso but also of the Douanier Rousseau, Georges Braque, Jacques Lipchitz and Joan Miro.

About the Author

Christopher Green is professor at the Courtauld Institute of Art, University of London. Among his publications on French twentieth-century art is "Art in France, 1900-1940", published by Yale University Press.

Reviews

"Green aspires to see Picasso's pictures as they may have been understood by his contemporaries. His concerns are historical, he stresses, and he divides his time between detailed analyses of Picasso's art and a meticulously constructed account of the contexts in which it was made, and first seen. The author has his own hunches as well – he has, after all, been writing on the subject for decades – and his ex cathedra authority is laced with informed speculations. ...It is a brilliant book... [and] leaves one pining for more of Green's insightful evaluation of the art... rich in allusions and implications... very reasonably argued, brilliantly dovetailed... [Green's] text is full enough of ideas and possible connections to engage much wider interests... The architecture/vertigo polarity [is] intact as a valuable, fertile aid to decoding the artist's images... and the newest aspects of Green's Picasso studies all spring from here" – Nicholas Wadley, Times Literary Supplement