Cy Twombly: Late Paintings 2003 - 2011
By (Author) Nela Pavlouskova
Thames & Hudson Ltd
Thames & Hudson Ltd
1st May 2015
United Kingdom
General
Non Fiction
759.2
Hardback
176
Width 245mm, Height 310mm
Beginning in 2003, when Twombly was seventy-five years old, a fresh surge of creativity brought new physicality into his art, expanding upon themes and modes of expression from throughout his career. Characterized by monumentality and flamboyant colour, these works often use large formats to accommodate broad and sweeping motions. Sometimes their surfaces are dense and heavily worked; sometimes they are expressively fluid, incorporating chance elements such as extravagant drips of paint. Favoured motifs such as ships, flowers and mythological references are revisited in new contexts and allowed to interact in unusual ways. Like his earlier output, however, these images continue to engage viewers in an active dialogue, resisting easy interpretation and offering up multiple layers of potential meaning. For Twombly, the very action of painting was fundamental: it was the moment when physical impulses and visual imagination came together on the canvas. Concluding with the series known as 'The Last Paintings', completed only a few months before his death in 2011, these are memorable works in which the gestural intensity of this great artist is vividly preserved.
Cy Twombly . . . was always much influenced by graffiti, calligraphy, action painting. His work can recall Jackson Pollock or Franz Kline. These last paintings are impressive for their boldness, their daring color combinations, their rolling or stabbing brushwork.-- "New York Times Books Review"
Reprising themes that span his entire sixty-year career, the nicely printed illustrations demonstrate his undiminished vigor and commitment to a singular combination of outside painting and intimate rumination.-- "Bookforum"
The first book to examine the artist's late period in depth.-- "Vogue"
Nela Pavlouskov was born in Brno, Czechoslovakia, and currently lives and works in Paris, where she is taking a PhD in the Department of Aesthetics at the Sorbonne.