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OverviewFull Product DetailsAuthor: William Corbett , CorbettPublisher: Steerforth Press Imprint: Steerforth Press Dimensions: Width: 15.20cm , Height: 0.80cm , Length: 22.90cm Weight: 0.184kg ISBN: 9781581952087ISBN 10: 1581952082 Pages: 128 Publication Date: 01 June 1998 Audience: General/trade , General Format: Paperback Publisher's Status: Out of Print Availability: In Print ![]() Limited stock is available. It will be ordered for you and shipped pending supplier's limited stock. Table of ContentsReviewsThe enigmatic artist Philip Guston is remembered here by poet and friend William Corbett. Guston, like many abstract expressionists, was associated with the Federal Art Project of the 1930s. Guston's solitary struggle between pure abstraction and loaded images of shoes, spaghetti, legs, and heads confused the critics, to say the least. Though Guston never quite attained the stature of de Kooning, Kline, Pollack, or Rothko, Corbett makes a convincing case for him by focusing on their personal relationship and his interpretation of Guston's later works. This important book is an intimate look at an artist written by a poet. -- Library Journal<br><br> Corbett's homage to Guston will help ensure that the art and life of a most remarkable artist are not forgotten. -- Art New England <br><br> Corbett has a gift for the close reading of Philip Guston's paintings. He gets to the heart of the artist's struggle for freedom and shows us the pain, courage, and ultimate brilliance of Guston's last work. -- Michael Mazur The enigmatic artist Philip Guston is remembered here by poet and friend William Corbett. Guston, like many abstract expressionists, was associated with the Federal Art Project of the 1930s. Guston's solitary struggle between pure abstraction and loaded images of shoes, spaghetti, legs, and heads confused the critics, to say the least. Though Guston never quite attained the stature of de Kooning, Kline, Pollack, or Rothko, Corbett makes a convincing case for him by focusing on their personal relationship and his interpretation of Guston's later works. This important book is an intimate look at an artist written by a poet. -- Library Journal Corbett's homage to Guston will help ensure that the art and life of a most remarkable artist are not forgotten. -- Art New England Corbett has a gift for the close reading of Philip Guston's paintings. He gets to the heart of the artist's struggle for freedom and shows us the pain, courage, and ultimate brilliance of Guston's last work. -- Michael Mazur The enigmatic artist Philip Guston is remembered here by poet and friend William Corbett. Guston, like many abstract expressionists, was associated with the Federal Art Project of the 1930s. Guston's solitary struggle between pure abstraction and loaded images of shoes, spaghetti, legs, and heads confused the critics, to say the least. Though Guston never quite attained the stature of de Kooning, Kline, Pollack, or Rothko, Corbett makes a convincing case for him by focusing on their personal relationship and his interpretation of Guston's later works. This important book is an intimate look at an artist written by a poet. -- Library Journal Corbett's homage to Guston will help ensure that the art and life of a most remarkable artist are not forgotten. -- Art New England Corbett has a gift for the close reading of Philip Guston's paintings. He gets to the heart of the artist's struggle for freedom and shows us the pain, courage, and ultimate brilliance of Guston's last work. -- Michael Mazur The enigmatic artist Philip Guston is remembered here by poet and friend William Corbett. Guston, like many abstract expressionists, was associated with the Federal Art Project of the 1930s. Guston's solitary struggle between pure abstraction and loaded images of shoes, spaghetti, legs, and heads confused the critics, to say the least. Though Guston never quite attained the stature of de Kooning, Kline, Pollack, or Rothko, Corbett makes a convincing case for him by focusing on their personal relationship and his interpretation of Guston's later works. This important book is an intimate look at an artist written by a poet. -- Library Journal Corbett's homage to Guston will help ensure that the art and life of a most remarkable artist are not forgotten. -- Art New England Corbett has a gift for the close reading of Philip Guston's paintings. He gets to the heart of the artist's struggle for freedom and shows us the pain, courage, and ultimate brilliance of Guston's last work. -- Michael Mazur Author InformationWilliam Corbett is a poet who lives in Boston's South End and is Director of Student Writing Activities in MIT's Program in Writing and Humanistic Studies. He writes frequently on art, directs the small press Pressed Wafer and is on the advisory board of Manhattan's CUE Art Foundation. Tab Content 6Author Website:Countries AvailableAll regions |