Frederick Carl Frieseke: The Evolution of an American Impressionist by Nicholas Kilmer, Linda McWhorter, Virginia M. Mecklenburg, David Sellin & H. Barbara Weinberg
folio. pp. 219. profusely illustrated. bibliography. index. hardcover. dw. (fine condition). Savannah, Georgia: Telfair Museum of Art & Princeton University Press, [2001].
ISBN-10: 0691089221 / ISBN-13: 9780691089225
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The color-drenched gardens and sun-dappled nudes by Frederick Carl Frieseke (1874-1939) have long been loved by admirers of American Impressionism, and his paintings are treasured in museum collections across the country. This beautiful and comprehensive volume--with more than one hundred color and almost eighty black-and-white plates--is the most ambitious ever devoted to his work. It is being published in conjunction with a major retrospective of the artist's work.
A biographical overview and a detailed chronology by the artist's grandson, including charming vintage photographs, provide much new information and correct several misconceptions about Frieseke's life and career. Three invaluable essays by leading scholars discuss the diverse stages of his work and place it in art historical context, detailing his experience as a student at Whistler's atelier in Paris and as a central member of the group of American expatriates who settled in Giverny, France, near the French master Monet. The book's groundbreaking scholarship casts new light on Frieseke, American Impressionism, and the art world at the turn of the last century.