R.O. Lenkiewicz / The Painter with Women

140,00 

Used Book, Very Good
Dispatched in 10-15 Days.
R.O. Lenkiewicz: The Painter with Women

Out of stock

Category:

Description

R.O. Lenkiewicz: The Painter with Women

Francis Mallett (Vorwort); Anna Navas (Text), Robert Lenkiewicz (Illustration)
Titel:
R.O. Lenkiewicz: The Painter with Women – the evolution of a project SIGNIERT/SIGNED
ISBN: 9780956848819 (ISBN-10: 0956848818)
Zustand: wie neu
Verlag: White Lane Press
Format: 28,6 x 1,6 x 28,6 cm
Seiten: 96
Gewicht: 1250 g
Einband: Leinen
Sprache: Englisch
Beschreibung: Schlagwörter: Kunst Malerei Erotik Bildband painting erotic art
Zustand: Buch und original Schutzumschlag einwandfrei. Das Buch wurde handsigniert von Francis Mallet und vermutlich von Anna Navas.
Klappentext:
“After a colourful life surrounded by controversy, Robert Oscar Lenkiewicz died prematurely in 2002 at the age of sixty. Through public gallery exhibitions at London’s Ben Uri Jewish Museum of Art in 1998 and more recently the Royal West of England Academy in Bristol, Lenkiewicz is now gaining overdue recognition as one this country’s most significant post-war figurative painters. Unfashionable in the art world of his time, his work communicates directly with people about their own lives and the world they live in.
In January 1994, Lenkiewicz’s eighteenth ‘Project’ The Painter with Women was exhibited at Birmingham’s International Convention Centre. Organised by the Halcyon Gallery, the exhibition attracted over 30,000 visitors in only eight days. It was highly unusual for Lenkiewicz to agree to show his work outside of his own premises on Plymouth’s Barbican but the aim was to raise enough money to purchase the large warehouse studio and to turn it into a permanent gallery and library dedicated to the study of the sociological and philosophical concerns of his previous Projects, and to the further ‘provocation of thought’.
His most recent large-scale Project, called Observations on Local Education, Lenkiewicz had described as the most depressing he had worked on, in spite of other earlier challenging themes such as Vagrancy, Mental Handicap, Old Age and Death. He became equally despondent with its apathetic reception from public and critics alike, although this was nothing new for Lenkiewicz, whose career had been marked by his refusal to conform to the art establishment or the public taste. Nevertheless, he was minded to embark on a new Project, one both self-reflective and intentionally provocative.
Subtitled ‘Observations of the Theme of the Double’, Lenkiewicz’s subsequent Project The Painterwith Women returned to the analysis of human relationships which had been the focus of previous themes such as Love and Romance, Jealousy and The Painter with Mary: A Study in Obsessional Behaviour. As ever painted from life, Lenkiewicz mainly portrayed himself as the central character in a series of paintings with female models. Like all self-portraits, they were in Lenkiewicz’s words ‘merely a painting of a mirror’. He compared relationships to the myth of Narcissus, who falls in love with his own reflection yet mistakes it for another person, concluding that the ‘loved one’ was merely our own double.
Of all Lenkiewicz’s Projects, The Painterwith Women was arguably the longest in the making, and during those six years it underwent significant development. This book charts that evolution through the artist’s own extensive diaries and other first-hand material, in particular the photographs and diaries of his friend, the photographer Dr Philip Stokes.
The original theme of’The Double’, which harked back to earlier ideas about relationships, soon took on new dimensions with Lenkiewicz’s adoption of classical allegories, in particular, that of the monastic St Anthony of Egypt. His research into the St Anthony theme took him from Athanasius’ Life of Anthony and Grunewald’s Isenheim Altarpiece through to more modern interpretations by French writer Gustave Flaubert and, especially, composer Paul Hindemith in WisoperaMathisderMaler. As Lenkiewicz’s identification with his alter ego of Anthony grew, the sub-text of the Project increasingly became a meditation on the artist’s own life.”

K72d
vom Autor signiert: ja – mehr signierte Titel von Francis Mallett (Vorwort); Anna Navas (Text), Robert Lenkiewicz (Illustration)
Erschienen: 2011

Reviews

There are no reviews yet.

Be the first to review “R.O. Lenkiewicz / The Painter with Women”

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *