Charles Sheeler
Across Media
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Author
Contributions
- Sheeler, Charles, 1883-1965. - Contributor
- National Gallery of Art (U.S.) - Contributor
- Art Institute of Chicago. - Contributor
- M.H. De Young Memorial Museum. - Contributor
Publication
2006 - National Gallery of Art, Washington, District of Columbia
Language
English
Word Count
56,250 words, Guess
Page Count
225 pages
Physical Format
Hardcover
Identifiers
- Open LibraryOL3413384M
- ISBN-100520248724
- OCLC Control Number61881164
- OCLC Control Numbercharlessheelerac0000broc
- Library of Congress Control Number2005029515
and 2 more
- Goodreads1264408
- LibraryThing1070618
Classifications
- DDC760.092
- LCCN6537.S523 A4 2006
Description
Charles Sheeler (1883-1965) is recognized as one of the founders of American modernism and one of the master photographers of the twentieth century. His work is synonymous with precisionism, a crisp, clean, hard-edged style that reconciled cubist abstraction and the machine aesthetic of Marcel Duchamp with American subject matter. Trained in industrial drawing, decorative painting, and applied art at the School of Industrial Art in Philadelphia, Sheeler also attended the Pennsylvania Academy of the Fine Arts, where he learned an impressionistic, painterly style. He later embraced European modernism and taught himself photography. Sheeler fully absorbed the lessons of each discipline and forged his own singular approach." "This beautifully illustrated book, created to accompany a traveling exhibition of Sheeler's work, features detailed analyses of the artist's mediums and working methods. Focusing on the complex, often paradoxical, relationships among photography, film, drawing, printmaking, and painting that were central to Sheeler's art, this pathbreaking book traces critical points in Sheeler's trajectory, beginning with a small selection of Sheeler's seminal photographs, circa 1917, of the interior of an eighteenth-century Quaker fieldstone house in Doylestown, Pennsylvania. Sections are also devoted to the 1920 film Manhatta, made in collaboration with Paul Strand; a series of commercial photographs of the Ford Motor Company's River Rogue factory (1927); the enigmatic painting The Artist Looks at Nature (1943) and its related works; and a group of mill subjects based on Sheeler's experiments with photomontage during the 1940s and 1950s. - Jacket flap.
Subjects
Topics
People
Genres
- Exhibitions.
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