商家名称 | 信用等级 | 购买信息 | 订购本书 |
Rembrandt's Women | |||
Rembrandt's Women |
The essays explore a variety of issues, ranging from the 17th-century Dutch notion of female beauty (was flab more attractive then?) to the significance of handkerchiefs held by women in portraits of the era. A key theme in these pages is the way Rembrandt's transformation of traditional mythological and biblical scenes featuring nude women created a new level of erotic immediacy. Scholars have unearthed some interesting answers to questions like, What sort of woman in 17th-century Amsterdam would allow herself to be portrayed nude in a work of art?
Published to coincide with an exhibition of the same name organized by the National Gallery of Scotland--on view at the Royal Academy of Arts, London through December 16, 2001--Rembrandt's Women offers an abundance of color and black-and-white reproductions in an attractive format. The fresh and far-ranging approach to the artist's life and times make the book a must for every Rembrandt lover's bookshelf. --Cathy Curtis
专业书评 From the Publisher
The book features 140 superb works drawn from the finest collections in the world -- sketches of women eomplyed in household chores, mothers with babies and toddlers, paintings of smiling servant girls and wizened old women, studies of the female nude, pictures of goddesses and historical heroines, and his little known erotic prints. It traces how mother, wife, mistress, maid, and models appear in compositions, and follows how, throughout his life, Rembrandt combined classical and northern traditions, the personal and the universal, with an extraordinary breadth of vision in his depiction of womankind. The essays by major Rembrandt scholars discuss the painter's biography in relation to the portrayal of women in his household; the social position of women in Rembrandt's time, the artistic context of Rembrandt's nudes; the identity of women who modelled for artist's in 17th century Holland; the significance of costume and jewellry in Rembrandt's images, eroticism in Rembrandt's works, and responses to Rembrandt's portrayal of women of later artists through the 18th and 19th centuries up through Picasso.