Sanctuary : Britain's artists and their studios / Hossein Amirsadeghi, editor ; Maryam Homayoun Eisler, executive editor ; photography by Robin Friend.
Publisher: London : Thames & Hudson, 2011Description: 600 p. col. ill. 34 cm001: 13987ISBN: 9780500977071Subject(s): Artists | Studios | ArtDDC classification: 709.2242 SANItem type | Current library | Collection | Call number | Copy number | Status | Date due | Barcode | |
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Book | MAIN LIBRARY Oversize Stock | OS 709.2242 SAN (Browse shelf(Opens below)) | 1 | Available | 095149 |
Enhanced descriptions from Syndetics:
From Botticelli to Bacon, da Vinci to Damien Hirst, artists have invested their personalities in the environments in which they have worked. Although today numerous artists have abandoned the studio model in favor of new modes of working enabled by new technologies, the studio space, often containing the visible remains of artistic ingenuity, toil, and torment, continues to present a window into the creative soul and a summary of widely varying methods and approaches.
Sanctuary: Britain's Artists and their Studios is the first publication in half a century to look behind the scenes at both artists' working lives and their workplaces, encouraging them to speak, delving into their minds and exploring their methodologies and personalities. Surveying 120 renowned artists living and working in Britain today, from the most noteworthy to new, upcoming talent, Sanctuary offers a visual feast of specially commissioned photography while following each artist through their working routines. Tony Cragg, Anthony Gormley, Jenny Saville, Anish Kapoor, Mark Wallinger, Phyllida Barlow, Jane and Louise Wilson, Thomas Houseago, Tracey Emin, the Chapman Brothers... the list goes on. In addition to highly individualized interviews with all of the artists featured in the book, the stage is set by three highly engaging essays exploring the meanings, configurations, and personalities of a huge range of studio settings and environments in the context of the contemporary British art scene.
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