John Piper
By (Author) Darren Pih
HarperCollins Publishers
Pavilion
23rd February 2018
United Kingdom
General
Non Fiction
Individual artists, art monographs
Paintings and painting
759.2
Nominated for William MB Berger Prize for British Art History 2018 2018
Hardback
128
Width 276mm, Height 216mm, Spine 16mm
850g
Published to accompany the John Piper exhibition at the Tate Liverpool and written by its curator, this book presents a comprehensive examination of the English artists role as champion of modernism in Britain.
John Piper (19031992) is renowned for his extraordinarily diverse practice that embraced landscape, architectural and abstract compositions, as well as his theatre and stage sets for Benjamin Britten and his stained-glass windows. The exhibition at Tate Liverpool is the first to examine Piper's role in European modernism, presenting major works by Piper alongside selected works by artists including Jean Hlion and Alexander Calder.
The book contains works by Piper including painting, relief, collage and photography and also presents comparative works and information compiling over 70 images. The book is divided into the following sections:
1. Introduction
2. Early Paintings & Drawings
3. Going Abstract
4. Picturesque Landscapes & War Artist
5. The Postwar Landscape
Accompanying the exhibition, this book offers an innovative look at the work of an incredibly versatile artist, evidencing how Pipers work fused the creation of the European avant-garde with a powerful sensitivity to Britain and its history.
Darren Pih is the Exhibitions and Displays Curator at Tate Liverpool, where he has worked since 2005. Darren has published numerous essays for exhibition catalogues and online.