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I Paint What I Want to See
I Paint What I Want to See
Oct 7, 2024 10:19 AM

Author:Philip Guston

I Paint What I Want to See

Illuminating reflections on painting and drawing from one of the most revered artists of the twentieth century

'Thank God for yellow ochre, cadmium red medium, and permanent green light'

How does a painter see the world? Philip Guston, one of the most influential artists of the twentieth century, spoke about art with unparalleled candour and commitment. Touching on work from across his career as well as that of his fellow artists and Renaissance heroes, this selection of his writings, talks and interviews draws together some of his most incisive reflections on iconography and abstraction, metaphysics and mysticism, and, above all, the nature of painting and drawing.

'Among the most important, powerful and influential American painters of the last 100 years ... he's an art world hero' Jerry Saltz, New York Magazine

'Guston's paintings make us think hard' Aindrea Emelife, Guardian

Reviews

Philip Guston's work gathers strength with the passing of time. During his lifetime he seemed an outsider, but now the world of painting seems to have regrouped around him. This book captures the breadth and depth of his thinking, and also captures the feeling of an intensely lively era when artists like Cage, Feldman and Guston felt that making art was a branch of philosophy. I think everybody interested in the evolution of culture should read this thought-provoking and timely book

—— Brian Eno

Vital in grasping Guston's contribution to post-war American art and his abiding significance to contemporary painters

—— Ben Luke , The Art Newspaper

An appealing little book ... A pocketsized portfolio of Philip Guston's writings, talks and interviews ... It includes a joyous appreciation of the Renaissance master Piero della Francesca ... advice to art students ... [and] insights into what makes a great artist tick

—— Stephen Smith , The Times

This expertly curated selection of Guston's writings, talks and interviews draws together the artist's most incisive reflections on iconography and abstraction, metaphysics and mysticism, and the nature of painting and drawing... If you've never heard of him, this is a great introduction; if you have, this book will deepen your knowledge and understanding

—— Creative Boom

A brilliant book absolutely crammed with surprising stories. Muse flips the easel and brings the models and inspirations of famous works themselves into the spotlight, scraping away old coatings of myth, cliché and ignorance to reveal the true tales of these overlooked figures, and their place of power in the history of art. An essential read that should be on every bookshelf

—— Edward Brooke-Hitching, author of The Madman’s Gallery

Ruth Millington's Muse is an essential guide to the inspirational women and men who have shaped art over the centuries. Muse sheds new and persuasive light on a diverse array of models' stories - their lives, hopes and daring actions - restoring their voices in ways that change our perceptions of who they were, and who we are today as a result.

—— Sophie Haydock, author of 'The Flames'

An excellent look at the artist's muse and demystifying the idea of them as merely a passive object of passion

—— FAD Magazine, *Summer Reads of 2022*

A provocative tome

—— ARTnews

Ruth Millington's Muse adds another dimension...taking the women (and nine men) on the canvas as her subject...successfully fleshing out the lives behind some of art history's most famous faces

—— Hall W. Rockefeller, Hyperallergic.com

Muse by Ruth Millington is a fascinating book that aims, and one could even say succeeds, to establish a new status for the muse in art history

—— DailyArt Magazine

1000 years of joys and sorrows are here concentrated into a mere 100. They are years that teem with life of a startling variety. The presentation is artful and the translation exquisite

—— Perry Link, author of An Anatomy of Chinese

An eloquent and unsilenceable voice of freedom

—— New York Times

Ai Weiwei is the kind of visionary any nation should be proud to count among its creative class. He has drawn the world's attention to the vibrancy of contemporary Chinese culture

—— Time Magazine

Elegiac... vivid and revealing

—— Guardian

[An] ambitious memoir... 1,000 Years of Joys and Sorrows touches on the inevitable contradictions of being an activist and an art superstar, but it is above all a story of inherited resilience, strength of character and self-determination

—— Sean O'Hagan , Observer

Ai Weiwei's detention in 2011... forms by far the most compelling part of the book... These exchanges are crisply and humanely recreated, as are those with Ai's well-educated interrogators

—— Christopher Harding , Daily Telegraph

A close look at a father-son dynamic, written in affecting terms, as well as a narrative about legacy, politics and creativity

—— Time

Few people have combined art and activism to greater international acclaim than Ai Weiwei, with installations that address free speech, the environment and the global migrant crises.... Ai's new memoir, 1000 Years of Joys and Sorrows, can be seen as another act of defiance. As a child in Mao Zedong's China, he writes, he was subject to a culture "that made our memories vanish like shadows." The book, published November 2, is his effort to reclaim his country's and his family's dramatic past

—— Wall Street Journal Magazine

An illuminating through-line emerges in the many parallels Ai traces between his life and his father's... Ai writes evocatively of the nights spent in his detention cell when "all I could do was use memories to fill the time, looking back at people and events, like gazing at a kite on a long string flying farther and farther, until it cannot be seen at all." Most poignant are his midnight conversations with the young, rural-born men employed to guard his door, their cracking joints reminding Ai of "a crisp snapping sound like a turnip being broken into two pieces... In "1000 Years of Joys and Sorrows," Ai does not allow his own scraps to remain buried. To unearth them is an act of unburdening, an open letter to progeny, a suturing of past and present. It is the refusal to be a pawn - and the most potent assertion of a self

—— New York Times Book Review

Moving and passionate... Weiwei writes with clarity and detail, and readers can feel the anxiety of political turmoil and the power of disobedience as he defies Chinese authorities, over and over again ... heart-rending yet exhilarating

—— Bookpage

A heartfelt history of his own experiences, and those of his father, the celebrated poet Ai Qing... Through his reflections, Ai presents a gripping history of twentieth-century China and a timely reflection on the importance of art as a medium for underscoring injustice, and never forgetting

—— UK Press Syndication

[A] tale of extraordinary resilience...Ai Weiwei vividly reflects on his own life and that of his father

—— Fiona Sturges , Guardian, *Books of the Year*

A powerful memoir-cum-manifesto

—— New Statesman

Entirely keeping Ai Weiwei's taste for provocation...his memoir refuses to play by the rules... [1000 Years of Joys and Sorrows] leaves the reader with little doubt of Ai's commitment to freedom of expression and his willingness to confront power and inequality in all its forms

—— Nick Holdstock , Literary Review

[A] brave commentary on totalitarianism and his confrontation of the Chinese authorities

—— Art Newspaper, *Summer Reads of 2022*

An eye-raising, compelling read.

—— Creative Bloom, *Best Art Books of Summer 2022*
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