Yves Bonnefoy - The Lure and the Truth of Painting: Selected Essays on Art

Yves Bonnefoy - The Lure and the Truth of Painting: Selected Essays...

Yves Bonnefoy, celebrated translator and critic, is widely considered the most important and influential French poet since World War II. He is also a literary and art critic of renown; in writing extensively on the visual arts, he continues the critical tradition begun in the eighteenth century by Diderot and continued in succeeding centuries by Baudelaire, Apollinaire, and other leading French poets. The sixteen essays collected here show the breadth and depth of Bonnefoy's writings on art, aesthetics, and poetics. His lyrical ruminations range across centuries and cultures, and artistic media, from Byzantium to postwar France, from the paintings of Piero della Francesca to the sculptures of Alberto Giacometti to the photographs of Henri Cartier-Bresson, from the Italian Giorgio Morandi to the American Edward Hopper. Always fascinated in his poetry by the nature of color and light and the power of the image, Bonnefoy continues to pursue these themes in his discussion of the lure and truth of representation

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Yves Bonnefoy
Richard Howard Stamelman
Art

Professional Reviews

Howard, Richard, Artforum: "It will not, such writing, be to everyone's taste. Certainly it is not invariably to mine--we all have our moods and moments when we don't want to read about the art we love, or even the art we dislike, from such a relentlessly barricaded perspectives. But as I read these essays over and over...I am inveterately raised to a plane of comprehension, of identification even, to which no other writing on art since Proust has granted access. I might summarize the endeavor made by both poet and his readers as a perversion of the Shakespearean question: Death and Absence, who is here?"
Yves Bonnefoy - The Lure and the Truth of Painting: Selected...
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