Softbound
2002 · London
by Rosenthal, Michael and Martin Myrone (editors) and Contributions by Rica Jones, Martin Postle, Diane Perkins, Christine Riding, and Louise Hayward
London: Tate Publishing, 2002. Softbound. VG+. Pictorial color wraps. 296 pp., 180 color/b&w text figures. A lavish monograph on the 18th-century British painter. "Thomas Gainsborough (1727-1788) was one of the masters of 18th-century art. This stunning book, published to accompany a major international exhibition covering the artist's entire career, reveals the sheer range, quality, and originality of Gainsborough's work, from his engagingly naturalistic landscapes and touching images of children to his sophisticated and glamorous society portraits. In their revealing essay, Michael Rosenthal and Martin Myrone explore Gainsborough's dynamic involvement with the social world of his day, while other essays explore his subtle approach to the lucrative world of fashionable portraiture and the often pointed social commentary behind his seductive landscapes. This volume provides new and refreshing insights into Gainsborough as an artist who succeeded in creating an experimental and modern art for his own time, and whose works remain vital and rewarding today. (Inventory #: 105120)