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Alan Davie in Hertford

(Hardback)


Publishing Details

Full Title:

Alan Davie in Hertford

Contributors:

By (Author) Mark Hudson
With Hertford Art Hub

ISBN:

9781914414558

Publisher:

Unicorn Publishing Group

Imprint:

Unicorn Publishing Group

Publication Date:

7th April 2022

UK Publication Date:

7th April 2022

Country:

United Kingdom

Classifications

Readership:

General

Fiction/Non-fiction:

Non Fiction

Main Subject:
Other Subjects:

Individual artists, art monographs
The Arts: art forms
History of art

Dewey:

759.29

Physical Properties

Physical Format:

Hardback

Number of Pages:

112

Dimensions:

Width 230mm, Height 280mm

Description

This ground-breaking publication provides a new view of the great Scottish artist Alan Davie (1920-2014), whose intensely physical gestural painting stood the staid post-war British art world on its head. In advance of a new Davie gallery in Hertford, the visually spectacular book argues that far from being an essentially historical figure, defined by the abstract expressionist era of the Fifties and early Sixties when he enjoyed his greatest fame, Davie was a prophetic artist whose preoccupations with universal creativity and self-realisation are more relevant today than theyve ever been. Lavishly illustrated with rare archive photographs and little-seen paintings, Alan Davie in Hertford demonstrates that Davies visionary art was far more closely bound up with physical places than is generally supposed, not least the quiet market town of Hertford, where he lived for 60 years. A catalogue of 40 works intended as the new gallerys core collection, provides a rich and fabulous survey of Davies work, from student works of the Thirties to some of his very last paintings.

Author Bio

Mark Hudson is the art critic of the Independent. His books include Titian, the Last Days, Our Grandmothers Drums (winner of the Thomas Cook and Somerset Maugham awards), Coming Back Brocken (winner of the NCR Award, precursor of the Baillie-Gifford Prize) and The Music in my Head. He has written for the Guardian, Sunday Times, Observer, Financial Times and was for five years chief art critic of the Daily Telegraph. Mark Hudson knew Alan Davie well while working on the film Alan Davie, An Excess of Energy with film editor Justin Krish. The open-ended nature of the project allowed Hudson to observe Davies working processes at close quarters over a long period from the early 80s to within weeks of the artists death in 2014.

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