Thursday, March 1, 2018

Picturing People: The New State of the Art By Charlotte Mullins. (Thames & Hudson, 192 pages, 200 illus., $40.)


What drives artists to represent people as they do? This question, at the heart of figurative art, and how we represent ourselves as a society, is especially relevant today. Author Charlotte Mullins picks up the conversation at a time when the art world is influenced by the proliferation of images of all kinds, across all mediums, as well as a growing interest in figurative art.

Profiles of nearly sixty artists―from Kara Walker and Grayson Perry to Cindy Sherman and Kehinde Wiley―showcase significant works and are accompanied by the artists’ commentary, illustrating the range of motivations, mediums, and techniques driving one of the most potent genres of art today. The book is organized into five thematic sections that reflect artists’ motivations, which range from investigating the history of art itself to exploring interpersonal relationships. Mullins’s keen curatorial eye picks out informed, sometimes unexpected juxtapositions of artists that reveal new affinities and distinctions between them, making Picturing People an important contribution to the study of figurative art. 200+ illustrations
Focusing on 70 contemporary painters from at least 24 countries, this excellent and highly readable survey argues that these new, sometimes unsettling pictures of people are a reaction to the political unrest, economic turbulence, culture clashes and confusion of the postwar era. Images range from cartoonish sketches to complex family scenes.

No comments:

Post a Comment