Isabel Bishop

$25.00 CAD

pp. 180, b/w and colour illustrations of the art works, “Like her close friend Reginald Marsh, realist painter Isabel Bishop set down city street scenes in a quick, reportorial style. Her sketches and oils of working women from the 1930s and ’40s can be read almost as a feminist statement. In her “Union Square” series and related vignettes of New York, Bishop, who died in 1988, captured odd or coarse facial expressions as well as the quiet dignity of ordinary people. Her self-portraits are striking, and her relaxed nudes, awash in color, are at once sensuous and ethereal. In an oil and tempera series of random, aloof walking figures done in the 1960s and ’70s, Bishop integrates multiple points of view into one pictorial space, suggesting the terribly isolating tendencies of modern urban living. Novelist Yglesias has a sensitive eye in her sympathetic essay which pins down the artist’s “piercingly loving” quality.” Heavy book, additional postage will apply.

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SKU: 129448 Category:

Book Information

ISBN 847809765
Published Date 1989
Book Condition Very Good
Jacket Condition Very Good
Binding Hardcover
Size 4to
Place of Publication New York
Edition First Edition
Category:
Author:
Publisher:

Description

pp. 180, b/w and colour illustrations of the art works, “Like her close friend Reginald Marsh, realist painter Isabel Bishop set down city street scenes in a quick, reportorial style. Her sketches and oils of working women from the 1930s and ’40s can be read almost as a feminist statement. In her “Union Square” series and related vignettes of New York, Bishop, who died in 1988, captured odd or coarse facial expressions as well as the quiet dignity of ordinary people. Her self-portraits are striking, and her relaxed nudes, awash in color, are at once sensuous and ethereal. In an oil and tempera series of random, aloof walking figures done in the 1960s and ’70s, Bishop integrates multiple points of view into one pictorial space, suggesting the terribly isolating tendencies of modern urban living. Novelist Yglesias has a sensitive eye in her sympathetic essay which pins down the artist’s “piercingly loving” quality.” Heavy book, additional postage will apply.

Additional information

Weight 0.85 kg