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OverviewThe Hungarian-born French painter Simon Hantaï (1922–2008) is best known for abstract, large-format works produced using pliage: the painting of a crumpled, gathered, or systematically pleated canvas that the artist then unfolds and stretches for exhibition. In her study of this profoundly influential artist, Molly Warnock presents a persuasive historical account of his work, his impact on a younger generation of French artists, and the genesis and development of the practice of pliage over time. Simon Hantaï and the Reserves of Painting covers the entirety of Hantaï’s expansive oeuvre, from his first aborted experiments with folding around 1950 to his post-pliage experiments with digital scanning and printing. Throughout, Warnock analyzes the artist’s relentlessly searching studio practice in light of his no less profound engagement with developments in philosophy, psychoanalysis, and critical theory. Engaging both Hantaï’s art and writing to support her argument and paying particular attention to his sustained interrogation of religious painting in the West, Warnock shows how Hantaï’s work evinces a complicated mixture of intentionality and contingency. Appendixes provide English translations of two major texts by the artist, “A Plantaneous Demolition” and “Notes, Deliberately Confounding, Accelerating, and the Like for a ‘Reactionary,’ Nonreducible Avant-Garde.” Original and insightful, this important new book is a central reference for the life, art, and theories of one of the most significant and exciting artists of the twentieth century. It will appeal to art historians and students of modernism, especially those interested in the history of abstraction, materiality and Surrealism, theories of community, and automatism and making. Full Product DetailsAuthor: Molly Warnock (Assistant Professor, Johns Hopkins University)Publisher: Pennsylvania State University Press Imprint: Pennsylvania State University Press Volume: 32 Dimensions: Width: 22.90cm , Height: 2.60cm , Length: 24.10cm Weight: 1.429kg ISBN: 9780271085029ISBN 10: 0271085029 Pages: 280 Publication Date: 09 July 2020 Audience: Professional and scholarly , Professional & Vocational Format: Hardback Publisher's Status: Active Availability: Out of stock The supplier is temporarily out of stock of this item. It will be ordered for you on backorder and shipped when it becomes available. Table of ContentsList of Illustrations Acknowledgments Introduction Part 1: Writing and Painting 1. Unfolding Automatism 2. Excessive Gestures 1 3. Excessive Gestures 2 4. Ordinary Painting Part 2: Folding and Cutting 5. The Passage to Pliage 6. Figuring Finitude 1 7. Figuring Finitude 2 8. Abandoned Painting Envoi: A Politics of With Appendix 1: A Plantaneous Demolition Simon Hantai and Jean Schuster Appendix 2: Notes, Deliberately Confounding, Accelerating, and the Like for a 'Reactionary,' Nonreducible Avant-Garde Simon Hantai Notes Bibliography IndexReviews“Warnock’s achievement in bringing together Hantaï’s modernist ambition with his extremely conservative use for religion is enormous. She is thorough but never boring and never even for a moment suggests that there’s anything odd about the premises with which he works.” —Jeremy Gilbert-Rolfe, Critical Inquiry “Molly Warnock, a skilled academic art historian, offers an elaborate reconstruction and explication of Hantaï’s aesthetic.” —David Carrier, caa.reviews “Through sustained analysis of both Hantaï’s canvases and writings, [Warnock] provides the most extensive reading of the artist to date.” —Matthew Bowman, nonsite.org “Warnock makes forays into the intellectual world of Hantaï’s postwar Paris and then uses her findings to guide us across and into the complex surfaces of the paintings themselves, many of which are buried in vaults and seen far too rarely. The focus is tight, which is arguably appropriate for the first scholarly monograph on the artist in English, and her command of the material is impressive.” —Harry Cooper, nonsite.org “Warnock’s monograph makes a signature contribution to the study of Hantaï’s body of work and to the wider history of modernism. She explicates the fundamental theoretical and practical concerns of an understudied artist whose work, while important, is not well known to a broad audience. Without a doubt, her scholarship provides the most sophisticated art-historical analysis of Hantaï’s thought and practice to date.” —Michael Schreyach, author of Pollock’s Modernism “With this book we finally have a beautifully written, deeply researched, and comprehensive account of one of postwar Europe's most significant artists. Far from the cliché of Simon Hantaï and his folded (‘pliage’) paintings as detached and impersonal, Molly Warnock reveals the artist’s full investment in a ‘deep context’ of ideas, historical issues, and major artistic movements: from surrealism to minimalism via abstract expressionism, traversing the terrain of the Catholic liturgy, philosophies of community and phenomenology, and questions of writing and legibility, while never forgetting the techniques and fundamentals of the practice of painting.” —Natalie Adamson, coeditor of Material Imagination: Art in Europe, 1946–72 “A beautiful monograph . . . focused, exquisitely written and illustrated in colour, with lots of careful meditations on the artworks themselves.” —Victoria H. F. Scott, 21: Inquiries into Art, History, and the Visual With this book we finally have a beautifully written, deeply researched, and comprehensive account of one of postwar Europe's most significant artists. Far from the cliche of Simon Hantai and his folded ('pliage') paintings as detached and impersonal, Molly Warnock reveals the artist's full investment in a 'deep context' of ideas, historical issues, and major artistic movements: from surrealism to minimalism via abstract expressionism, traversing the terrain of the Catholic liturgy, philosophies of community and phenomenology, and questions of writing and legibility, while never forgetting the techniques and fundamentals of the practice of painting. -Natalie Adamson, coeditor of Material Imagination: Art in Europe, 1946-72 Warnock's monograph makes a signature contribution to the study of Hantai's body of work and to the wider history of modernism. She explicates the fundamental theoretical and practical concerns of an understudied artist whose work, while important, is not well known to a broad audience. Without a doubt, her scholarship provides the most sophisticated art-historical analysis of Hantai's thought and practice to date. -Michael Schreyach, author of Pollock's Modernism With this book we finally have a beautifully written, deeply researched and comprehensive account of one of postwar Europe's most significant artists. Far from the cliche of Simon Hantai and his folded ('pliage') paintings as detached and impersonal, Molly Warnock reveals the artist's full investment in a 'deep context' of ideas, historical issues, and major artistic movements: from surrealism to minimalism via abstract expressionism; traversing the terrain of the Catholic liturgy, philosophies of community and phenomenology, and questions of writing and legibility; while never forgetting the techniques and fundaments of the practice of painting. -Natalie Adamson, coeditor of Material imagination: Art in Europe, 1946-1972 Warnock's monograph makes a signature contribution to the study of Hantai's body of work and to the wider history of modernism. She explicates the fundamental theoretical and practical concerns of an understudied artist whose work, while important, is not well known to a broad audience. Without a doubt, her scholarship provides the most sophisticated art historical analysis of Hantai's thought and practice to date. -Michael Schreyach, author of Pollock's Modernism With this book we finally have a beautifully written, deeply researched, and comprehensive account of one of postwar Europe's most significant artists. Far from the cliche of Simon Hantai and his folded ('pliage') paintings as detached and impersonal, Molly Warnock reveals the artist's full investment in a 'deep context' of ideas, historical issues, and major artistic movements: from surrealism to minimalism via abstract expressionism, traversing the terrain of the Catholic liturgy, philosophies of community and phenomenology, and questions of writing and legibility, while never forgetting the techniques and fundaments of the practice of painting. -Natalie Adamson, coeditor of Material Imagination: Art in Europe, 1946-72 Warnock's monograph makes a signature contribution to the study of Hantai's body of work and to the wider history of modernism. She explicates the fundamental theoretical and practical concerns of an understudied artist whose work, while important, is not well known to a broad audience. Without a doubt, her scholarship provides the most sophisticated art-historical analysis of Hantai's thought and practice to date. -Michael Schreyach, author of Pollock's Modernism Author InformationMolly Warnock is is an art historian and critic based in Baltimore. Tab Content 6Author Website:Countries AvailableAll regions |
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