Gao Xingjian: Painter Of The Soul Hardcover
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Author 1
Daniel Bergez
Book Description
Winner of the Nobel Prize in Literature in 2000, novelist Gao Xingjian is also an artist whose paintings are exhibited worldwide. Born in China in 1940, the multitalented Gao also excelled equally as a critic and playwright, but when his avant-garde plays were banned, he left China in 1987 and settled in France, where he lives today. A champion of a return to painting as a pure, intuitive form of expression, he remains as free from the diktats of the contemporary art market as he was from Communist censorship. Illustrated throughout with two hundred reproductions, this stunning book showcases for the first time over two decades of Gao Xingjian s visual oeuvre. Gao s groundbreaking technique allows him to work with ink, a traditional Chinese medium, on large canvases. Inspired by a dreamlike inner world, Daoism, the Chinese "literati "painting tradition, and Western modernism, Gao Xingjian s masterful ink-wash paintings envelop and transport the viewer to another plane. Daniel Bergez s accompanying text draws from Gao s "Soul Mountain" and other works to offer insights into these enigmatic landscapes and figures. Also included is an interview with the artist that reveals the motivation behind Gao s unique pictorial creations."
Language
English
Publisher
Asia Ink
Publication Date
15 March 2014
Number of Pages
264
About the Author
Daniel Bergez is an author, painter, literary and art critic, and professor of French literature. His books on the relationship between pictorial and literary creation, including "Litterature et peinture" ("Literature and Painting"), are authorities in the field. Sherry Buchanan is a publisher, editor, and author. Before she created Asia Ink, she worked for the "Wall Street Journal" and "The" "International Herald Tribune" in Brussels, Paris, London, and Hong Kong."
Editorial Review
A mesmerizing gallery of ink-wash works that illustrates the different techniques, themes and periods in Gao s extensive body of work. The . . . book, however, is more than just a monochrome beauty. Bergez . . . plumbed the depths of Gao s works in brush and pen to surface the profound harmony between his writings and paintings. The result: a visually sumptuous read that is erudite yet approachable. --Huang Lijie "The Straits Times (Singapore) ""