Julian Schnabel: Paintings 1978-2003 (Hatje Cantz) (German Edition)
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Average customer review:Product Description
People have asked me, as a painter, how do I do it? There's no separation really, between life and art for me. That can sound like a pretentious thing, but what's the fucking difference? Art, that's what I do, and I use everything, consciously or unconsciously. --Julian Schnabel
Observers of contemporary art associate the name Julian Schnabel with highly evocative, large-scale paintings. At the time of his early exhibitions in the U.S. and Europe in the 80s, the larger-than-life Schnabel was loudly hailed as a new milestone in the development of painting, the savior of an art form declared dead years before. Still painting some of the most massive canvases around, Schnabel is a virtually unrivalled master in the use of "bigness" and a broad range of materials. Fragmentation and overlapping play an important role in his art, in terms of both material and content. If his paintings don't exhibit a consistent style, why should they? Instead, they combine oil painting and collage techniques, classical pictorial elements inspired by historical art, Neo-Expressionist features, as well as figuration and abstraction, gesture and structure. This volume presents a broad selection of Schnabel's paintings in a survey of his diverse oeuvre, with emphasis placed on works from 1990 to the present.
Essays by Robert Fleck, Max Hollein, Alison Gingeras and Ingrid Pfeiffer.
Hardcover, 10.25 x 11.5 in./176 pgs / 70 color and 30 b & w.
Product Details
- Amazon Sales Rank: #1070311 in Books
- Published on: 2004-04-02
- Released on: 2004-04-02
- Format: Illustrated
- Original language: English, German
- Number of items: 1
- Binding: Hardcover
- 176 pages
Customer Reviews
THE kITSCHMEISTER REVEALED
Schnabel's career proves that one can indeed fool some of the people all the time. The reproductions of his paintings will show you how many collectors with more money than taste bungled in their esteem for this hack.
another book about the kitschmeister
If you've ever wondered whether Robert Hughes is right about Schnabel, the reproductions in the book will show you he is.



