This book offers the only current retrospective of the influential American artist Philip Guston, featuring over 300 images, including many previously unpublished works. It presents a comprehensive overview of Guston's visionary art, showcasing his most famous pieces alongside lesser-known works and personal photographs.
Louise Bourgeois's artistic journey spanned nearly 75 years, showcasing her profound inner struggles through innovative and candid works. Her 1982 MoMA retrospective marked a vibrant late career, solidifying her influence in modern art until her passing in 2010. Primarily a sculptor, Bourgeois explored various materials and contributed to movements like Surrealism and Postminimalism, while maintaining her unique style. "Intimate Geometries" features over 1000 illustrations and offers a deep, personal analysis of her life and art by Robert Storr, a close friend.
Ranging from photo-based pictures to gestural abstraction, Gerhard Richter's diverse body of work calls into question many widely-held attitudes about the importance of stylistic consistency and the relationship of technological means and mass media imagery to traditional studio methods and formats. Unlike many of his peers, he has explored these issues through the medium of painting, challenging it to meet the demands posed by new forms of conceptual art. In every level of his varied output--from his austere photo-based realism of the early 60s, to his brightly colored gestural abstractions of the early 80s, to his notorious cycle of black-and-white paintings of the Baader-Meinhof group--Richter has assumed a critical distance from vanguardists and conservatives alike regarding what painting "should" be. The result has been one of the most convincing renewals of painting's vitality to be found in late twentieth- and early twenty-first-century art. With an extensive and insightful critical essay by curator Robert Storr, a recent interview with the artist, a chronology, an exhibition history and nearly 300 color and duotone reproductions, Gerhard Forty Years of Painting marks a significant contribution to the understanding of contemporary art in general, and Gerhard Richter in particular.
Gerhard Richter (b. 1932) is one of the most highly regarded of contemporary artists, and his series of 15 paintings known as October 18, 1977, is one of the 20th century's most famous works on a political theme. It commemorates the day on which three young German radicals, members of the militant Baader-Meinhof group, were found dead in a Stuttgart prison; they were pronounced suicides, but many people suspected that they had been murdered. Richter's paintings, created 11 years after this traumatic event, are among the most challenging works of the artist's career.These hauntingly powerful images, derived from newspaper and police photography, are now in the collection of the Museum of Modern Art, New York, and will be on view beginning in September 2000 as part of the MoMA2000 series of exhibitions. In this book, Robert Storr provides necessary political background to the series, but his approach is art historical, offering insight into the complexities of "history painting" in the modern era.
This concluding volume of Robert Storr's writings offers a comprehensive look at his insights as a prominent American art critic and curator. It encapsulates his reflections and analyses on art, providing readers with a deeper understanding of his influential perspectives. This collection is a significant contribution to art literature, rounding out Storr's extensive body of work and enriching the discourse surrounding contemporary art.
Featuring works from over sixty-five renowned artists, this volume showcases Robert Rauschenberg's personal collection, displayed at Gagosian Gallery in New York. It includes contributions from art historian Robert Storr, who explores Rauschenberg's inspirations and relationships within the art world. Complementing the illustrations are biographies by Mimi Thompson, which highlight the significance of each artist's work and its impact on Rauschenberg's artistic vision, alongside rare archival photographs that enrich the narrative of this unique collection.
A Museum of Modern Art Book This splendidly illustrated panorama of the arts from 1920 to 1960 focuses on four landmark years-1929, 1939, 1948, and 1955. Published to accompany the second of three cycles of millennial exhibitions (MoMA2000) at The Museum of Modern Art, New York, Making Choices presents cross-sections of modern art in all its many aspects during this period, and shows how the concept of simultaneity was essential to the concept of early modernism. The sheer diversity of work made in this period becomes clear as readers survey the different types of film, photography, design, painting, sculpture, drawing, and printmaking-all from the Modern's collections-reproduced here. But the richly variegated artistic texture revealed by such an across-the-board look also brings to light unexpected correspondences among distinct objects and images. Making Choices points toward modern art's heterogeneity even as it invites readers to search out and discover imaginative correlations. Approximately 350 illustrations, 220 in full color, 9 1/2 x 12"
Bruce Nauman's work surveyed by the former Museum of Modern Art curator who organized his major 1995 retrospective American artist Bruce Nauman (born 1941) has worked across a wide range of mediums including neon, sculpture, video, installation, performance and drawing to pursue his question of what it means to create art. Edited by art historian Francesca Pietropaolo, this book brings together for the first time a selection of essays and articles on Nauman by the eminent art critic, art historian and curator Robert Storr. The first volume of Storr's Focal Points series, featuring introductory essays by Storr and Pietropaolo, this richly illustrated book gathers six texts on Nauman previously published in the art journals Parkett (1986), Modern Painters (2009) and Art Press (2009 and 2016), and in the exhibition catalogs Bruce Nauman (1994) and A Rose Has No Teeth (2007). Robert Storr (born 1949) formerly served as Senior Curator in the Department of Painting and Sculpture at the Museum of Modern Art, New York from 1990 to 2002, where he curated a seminal retrospective exhibition on Bruce Nauman in 1995. He is currently Dean Emeritus and Professor Emeritus of Art at the Yale University School of Art.