The Flow of Art: Essays and CriticismsYale University Press, 01.01.1997 - 462 Seiten "A wonderful collection of short pieces-gossipy, chatty, full of overheard conversations, unexpectedly sharp judgments, remarkable predictions. During his lifetime, Henry McBride was the best known and most widely read American art critic, and reading The Flow of Art you can see why. Never doctrinaire or solemn, he managed to write in such a way that the widest audience-artists, curators, collectors, people with a broad interest in the arts and even the general public, with its marginal interest could find something in him. . . . [He] is one of that small band who have made art criticism a branch of literature."-Sanford Schwartz, New Republic "This charming and amusing book ought to become compulsory reading for all students of the history of art."-Apollo "Important for the history of criticism in America and the personal and sometimes gossipy descriptions of the artist involved."-Choice |
Inhalt
Cézanne at the Metropolitan May 18 1913 | 33 |
Arthur B Davies and Cubism Nov 16 1913 | 39 |
Jules Pascin Dec 14 1913 | 47 |
Brancusi Mar 22 1914 | 58 |
Pascin in New York Oct 25 1914 | 66 |
Robert Henris California paintings Nov 22 1914 | 72 |
Marin and Taste Febr 28 1915 | 80 |
Picasso and Gertrude Stein in Paris Mar 14 1915 | 88 |
Manships sculpture Febr 7 1925 | 209 |
The Quinn Collection continued Mar 1926 | 215 |
American Expatriates in Paris Apr 1929 | 255 |
Modern Art Mar 1930 | 262 |
Rouault Apr 5 1930 | 268 |
Memorial Exhibition of Pascin Jan 3 1931 | 274 |
American Primitives Dec 19 1931 | 282 |
Eilshemius as a Cult Febr 27 1932 | 288 |
Cézanne Jan 16 1916 | 96 |
Maurice Sterne in Chicago Jan 14 1917 | 104 |
Unevenness of Bellows Mar 18 1917 | 112 |
The Death of Ryder April 1 1917 | 115 |
Opening of the Independents April 15 1917 | 121 |
Thomas Eakins I Nov 4 1917 | 130 |
Thomas Eakins II Nov 11 1917 | 136 |
Luncheon in Paris with Raoul Dufy Dec 30 1917 | 142 |
Gaston Lachaise Febr 17 1918 | 150 |
The Walter Arensbergs July 1920 | 156 |
American Art is Looking Up Oct 15 1922 | 163 |
A Prediction on Marin Mar 11 1923 | 169 |
Banquet by Pascin Nov 1923 | 175 |
Bellowss Crucifixion Jan 6 1924 | 181 |
Reappearance of Duchamps Nude Descending a Staircase | 189 |
A Sargent Retrospective Apr 1924 | 195 |
Hoppers watercolors Oct 25 1924 | 201 |
Thomas Bentons Murals at the Whitney Museum Dec | 295 |
Reginald Marshs Bowery Apr 8 1933 | 302 |
Walt Disney the Artist May 6 1933 | 306 |
New York by Stuart Davis Apr 28 1934 | 316 |
Philip Evergood Jan 26 1935 | 322 |
Winslow Homers Watercolors Jan 25 1936 | 330 |
A Marin Retrospective Oct 24 1936 | 337 |
Malvina Hoffmans Sculptures at Richmond Mar 13 1937 | 343 |
Tchelitchews Portraits Nov 6 1937 | 349 |
Duveneck April 16 1938 | 357 |
Balthus Mar 25 1939 | 365 |
El Greco Jan 18 1941 | 373 |
Edwin Dickinson Apr 5 1941 | 382 |
Matta and the Henry Cliffords Apr 3 1942 | 389 |
Georgia OKeeffe Jan 15 1944 | 395 |
André Masson May 6 1944 | 401 |
Andere Ausgaben - Alle anzeigen
The Flow of Art: Essays and Criticisms Henry McBride,Daniel Catton Rich Keine Leseprobe verfügbar - 1975 |
Häufige Begriffe und Wortgruppen
abstract abstract art admired already American art appeared Armory Show artist asked beauty Brancusi bronze Burchfield called canvas certainly Cézanne Charles Sheeler collection collectors course cubism Davies Demuth Dial drawings Duchamp Dufy Eilshemius Epstein exhibition eyes fact famous fashion feeling French friends Gallery Gaston Lachaise Georgia O'Keeffe Gertrude Stein happened heard Henry McBride idea interest John Marin knew Lachaise lady landscape late later least Léger live look Marcel Duchamp masterpiece Matisse matter Maurice Sterne Miró Miss modern art Montross Museum of Modern nature never O'Keeffe once painter painting Paris Pascin perhaps Peter Arno Picasso poet portrait present Ryder Sargent sculpture seems seen sort soul Stieglitz style success talk tell things Thomas Eakins thought tion Walt water colors Whistler Winslow Homer wish word York Sun young