Barnett Newman by Ann Temkin
Essays by Richard Shiff & Ann Temkin
Contributions by Suzanne Penn & Melissa Ho
4to. pp. 351. 180 colour & 87 b/w illustrations. exhibition history. bibliography. hardcover. dw. (fine condition). Philadelphia: Philadelphia Museum of Art in association with Yale University Press, [2002].
ISBN-10: 0300094299 / ISBN-13: 9780300094299
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Barnett Newman (1905-1970) was one of the most profound and influential artists of the twentieth century. A master of expansive spatial effects and evocative color, he pioneered painting that was both abstract and emotive, suffused with powerful philosophical and spiritual meaning. This landmark book surveys the breadth of Newman's career from his founding role in the New York School in the 1940s to his key influence on both minimalism and conceptual art in the 1960s. Featuring more than 100 of his paintings, drawings, prints, and sculptures, the book also offers significant new scholarly findings based on the archives of the Barnett Newman Foundation. Despite the apparent simplicity of his signature, the "zip," Newman's art is richly complicated and unexpectedly diverse. His works include such masterpieces as Onement 1 (1948), the series Stations of the Cross (1958-66), and the monumental sculpture Broken Obelisk (1967). Each work of art in this book is reproduced in full color and accompanied by its own entry. A comprehensive chronology of the artist's life based on new documentation, a selected bibliography, and a selected exhibition history complete the volume.