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Eduardo Paolozzi (continued)

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Eduardo Paolozzi, a remarkable figure in the world of Pop Art, was a sculptor and printmaker. His elaborate public projects, including the British Library courtyard and the London Underground, transformed spaces and captured the public’s attention.

Raised in Edinburgh by Italian parents, Paolozzi was greatly influenced by the American magazines he read, often collecting and pasting his favorite pictures into a scrapbook. This habit eventually became a defining technique in many of his iconic pieces. However, when Italy joined forces with Germany during World War II, Paolozzi, then a teenager, was labeled an enemy alien and interned. His father and grandfather were tragically killed when the ship they were on was attacked by a German U-boat.

After his release from internment, Paolozzi was conscripted into the army but managed to secure a discharge by feigning madness. He then pursued his passion for art, studying in both Edinburgh and London before moving to Paris in 1947. There, he met and was greatly inspired by renowned artists such as Georges Braque, Constantin Brancusi, and Alberto Giacometti. It was during this time that he created I Was A Rich Man’s Plaything, now widely considered to be one of the pioneering examples of Pop Art.

However, it wasn’t until 1952 that Paolozzi publicly displayed this work and over 40 other collages at the inaugural meeting of the Independent Group. Along with other influential artists, including photographer Nigel Henderson and sculptor Richard Hamilton, Paolozzi championed the use of found objects and popular culture in art. Their revolutionary ideas were brought to life in the groundbreaking 1956 exhibition, This is Tomorrow, held at the Whitechapel Gallery.

In the 1960s, Paolozzi continued to work prolifically, taking on teaching positions, experimenting with sculpture, and further developing his screenprinting skills. One of his most notable works from this time is As Is When, a series of prints inspired by the renowned philosopher Ludwig Wittgenstein. For his contributions to the arts, Paolozzi was bestowed with the title of CBE in 1968 and elected a Royal Academician in 1979.

www.ftn-books.com has several Paolozzi titles available.

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Francisco Clemente (continued)

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Francesco Clemente, an Italian contemporary artist, boasts a diverse background having lived in Italy, India, and New York City. His artistic style draws inspiration from traditional Indian art and culture. Clemente’s expertise spans various mediums, including drawing, fresco, graphics, mosaic, oils, and sculpture. He rose to prominence as a key figure in the Italian Transavanguardia movement of the 1980s, which rejected Formalism and conceptual art in favor of figurative art and Symbolism.

Born in 1952 in Naples, located in the southern region of Campania in Italy, Clemente briefly attended the faculty of architecture at the Sapienza, the university of Rome. However, he did not obtain a degree before shifting his focus entirely to his artistic pursuits. In Rome, he rubbed shoulders with fellow contemporary artists such as Luigi Ontani, Alighiero Boetti, and the American Cy Twombly. Boetti, who was a decade older, took on the role of both friend and mentor, and the two even ventured to Afghanistan in 1974. With Ontani, Clemente performed at the Galleria L’Attico. Despite his associations with artists from the Arte povera movement and his admiration for others such as Pino Pascali and Michelangelo Pistoletto, Clemente chose to concentrate on paper as his primary medium. He produced ink drawings based on his dreams and memories from his childhood and showcased his collages in a solo exhibition at the Galleria Giulia in Rome in 1971.

Clemente’s fascination with India began in 1973 on his first of many visits to the country. He eventually set up a studio in Madras (now Chennai) and immersed himself in the religious and folk traditions of India, as well as the country’s traditional art and crafts. In 1976 and 1977, he visited the library of the Theosophical Society of Madras to examine its religious literature. In 1980 and 1981, he collaborated with miniature painters from Orissa on his project “Francesco Clemente Pinxit”; a collection of twenty-four gouaches on antique hand-made rag paper.

www.ftn-books.com has several Clemente publications available:

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Jesus Rafael Soto (continued)

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Born in Venezuela, Jesús Rafael Soto was a renowned sculptor and painter whose career began as a helper in painting movie advertisements. He later received formal training at the Escuela de Artes Plásticas y Artes Aplicadas in Caracas, alongside contemporaries Carlos Cruz-Diez and Alejandro Otero. He also spent three years teaching at a small art academy in Venezuela.

Soto gained recognition for his contributions to the development of op-art and kinetic art – forms of art that incorporate movement. In 1950, he moved to Paris, where he became acquainted with the Atelier d’Art Abstrait through fellow artists and exhibited at the Salon des Réalités Nouvelles. A year later, he visited the Netherlands with a group of friends and was inspired by the works of Piet Mondrian at the Kröller-Müller Museum and Stedelijk Museum.

It was in Paris that Soto’s career as a kinetic artist took off. His open, interactive sculptures and installations, often consisting of thin hanging tubes that viewers can walk through, constantly transform and challenge the concept of reality as a collection of individual objects.

From 1970 to the early 1990s, Soto’s works were featured in prestigious museums in Paris, New York, and Amsterdam. In 1973, a museum solely dedicated to his works was opened in his hometown of Ciudad Bolivar, Venezuela.

Jesús Rafael Soto passed away in Paris in 2005, leaving behind a legacy of artwork that continues to captivate and inspire.

wwww.ftn-books.com has the catalog from the Stedelijk Museum with the Kinetic cover now available.

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Hanne Darboven (continued)

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Hanne Darboven behoorde tot de eerste generatie conceptuele kunstenaars. Voor haar waren getallen, classificatiesystemen en herhalingen middelen om te schrijven zonder te beschrijven. Haar seriële oeuvre heeft een romantisch, subjectief, bijna obsessief karakter en benadert de realiteit op een abstracte manier. Als een boekhouder probeerde Darboven dag na dag, vel na vel, boek na boek de tijd te overmeesteren of op z’n minst te meten in voor haarzelf functionele maar voor ons ondoorgrondelijke tijdsindelingen. Haar haast dwangneurotische werk vol cijfers, in woorden geschreven getallen en diagrammen omvat duizenden bladzijden.

www.ftn-books.com has some important Darboven titles available.

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Karl Gerstner (continued)

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Karl Gerstner (1930–2017) was a leading representative of Swiss typography and one of the most important innovators of typography, advertising graphics and corporate design. From 1945 to 1948, he completed an apprenticeship in Fritz Bühler’s studio and attended courses at the Allgemeine Gewerbeschule Basel, where Armin Hofmann and Emil Ruder were his instructors. In 1949 he followed Max Schmid’s call and joined the legendary design team of Geigy Pharmaceuticals, where he later met the copywriter and editor Markus Kutter. In 1959 they founded the advertising agency Gerstner + Kutter, which was joined by architect Paul Gredinger and in 1963 became GGK (Gerstner Gredinger Kutter), one of Europe’s most successful advertising agencies. Gerstner left the agency in 1970 to focus on his art and on selected design projects. Karl Gerstner had a significant influence on Swiss typography and graphic design. As an artist, he developed a systematic language of colors and forms and pleaded for a correlation between art and everyday life and a functional and aesthetic design of the environment.

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Anish Kapoor (continued)

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Anish Kapoor stands out as a prominent sculptor, exerting immense influence within his generation. His notable works include public sculptures that encompass both daring forms and impressive engineering techniques, seamlessly navigating through varying scales and numerous series. His works range from vast PVC skins, stretched or deflated; concave or convex mirrors that beguile and engulf the onlooker; and recesses intricately carved from stone and pigmented to the point of disappearance. These voids and protrusions evoke deep-seated metaphysical dichotomies of presence and absence, concealment and revelation. Forms twist inwards, resembling the womb, while materials absorb color rather than being painted on, as though rejecting the concept of an external surface and beckoning the audience towards the depths of their imagination. In the early 1980s, Kapoor’s geometric forms rise from the ground, seemingly composed of pure pigment. In contrast, his blood-red wax sculptures from the last decade – animated and self-generating – ravage their own surfaces and shatter the tranquil atmosphere of the gallery. There are echoes of ancient world mythologies – Indian, Egyptian, Greek, and Roman – blended with a contemporary flair.

www.ftn-books.com has some nice Kapoor titles now available.

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Daan van Golden (continued)

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In his early work, Daan van Golden (Rotterdam, 1936) crafts expressive and abstract canvases, painted in black and white. The turning point comes when he embarks on a trip to Japan in 1962. From that moment on, motifs from everyday life become Van Golden’s starting point and he paints meticulously detailed handkerchiefs, tea towels, and wrapping paper. He uses Japanese lacquer paint, which causes the brushstroke to become almost invisible. A smooth surface is formed. Van Golden creates the straight line and checkerboard patterns by masking parts of the canvas with tape.

The motifs and patterns from everyday reality continue to appear in Van Golden’s oeuvre. Over time, in the 1970s and 1980s, his work is joined by pieces inspired by high and low culture and its various representatives. Van Golden quotes painters he admires by enlarging and recreating fragments of their work, and also portrays musicians and movie stars. Details from the oeuvres of Henri Matisse, Alberto Giacometti, and Jackson Pollock make an appearance. Brigitte Bardot, Fats Domino, and Amadeus Mozart are just a few examples of icons featured in Van Golden’s work. In Blauwe studie naar Matisse (1982) he paints the parakeet from Matisse’s De parkiet en de zeemeermin (1952) on a large format – 188.5 by 118 centimeters. He uses a slide that he enlarges dramatically, giving the parakeet in his painting jagged contours.

Under the title Youth as an Art, Van Golden photographs his daughter Diana until she reaches eighteen. The photos also show the many places that Van Golden visits with his family, from trips to the United States to travels to Nepal, Mexico, Honduras, and India.

Van Golden studied at the Willem de Kooning Academy in Rotterdam (1954-1959). In 1999, he represented the Netherlands at the Venice Biennale. Van Golden’s work can be found in the collections of various renowned museums and galleries.

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Jan Dibbets (continued)

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In the 1960s, he explored the assumptions of what we see through photography. Dibbets is interested in the concept of perception. The photo Perspective Correction, My Studio i, i: Square on Wall (1969) shows how a trapezium drawn on the wall becomes a square due to the perspective in which Dibbets took this photo. The spatial illusion he creates in his work begs the question of what photography does and what the viewer sees when presented with an image. A visual “read, but it doesn’t say what it says.”

One of the recurring motifs in Dibbets’ oeuvre is the window. He photographs windows of various shapes – round or square – but never from a frontal position. This distorts them. A circle becomes an ellipse; a square becomes a diamond. In some series, Dibbets also plays with the ‘landscape’ in which the window is situated. He cuts the window out of the photo and re-introduces it against a solid painted background. This raises the question of what is the foreground and what is the background: photographic and painting illusions come together.

He cuts the window out of the photo and re-introduces it against a solid painted background. This raises the question of what is the foreground and what is the background: photographic and painting illusions come together.

“You have a subject [photography] in which almost nothing happens. Everyone is obediently taking photos, there are billions of photos, all day long. But there is hardly any research. But that research is precisely what makes it so interesting.

And that research is not being done. It has been forgotten for a hundred years. And that’s my drive.”

Dibbets studied at the Academy for Visual Arts in Tilburg (1959-1963) and at Central Saint Martins College of Art and Design in London (1967). His work was represented at the famous exhibitions Op losse schroeven at the Stedelijk Museum in Amsterdam.

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Alvar Alto (continued)

Hailing from Kuortane, Finland, Hugo Alvar Henrik Aalto was born in February 1898 and departed from this world on May 11, 1976 in Helsinki.

Between the years 1916 and 1921, Aalto pursued the study of architecture in Helsinki, later establishing his own architectural firm in Jyväskylä. Alvar Aalto is widely recognized as one of the most influential architects of the Scandinavian modern movement, earning him membership in the Congrés Internationeaux d’Architecture Moderne (CIAM).

Some of Aalto’s notable works include the campus of Helsinki University of Technology, the Säynätsalo Town Hall, and the Finlandia Hall in Helsinki. However, Aalto’s ambitions extended beyond the borders of Finland, leading to the realization of his architectural designs in various locations across the globe, with notable examples in Germany and the United States.

In addition to his contributions in architecture, Aalto also achieved success in the realm of product design. Perhaps his most renowned creation is the Aalto Vase, inspired by the abundance of lakes in Finland, serving as a testament to the neglect of human needs in the industrial world.

www.ftn-books.com has several titles on Alto now available.

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Erszébet Baerveldt (continued)

Erzsébet Baerveldt not only creates videos, but also captures moments through photos, paints with her brush, sketches with her pen, sculpts with her hands, and brings characters to life through performances. Baerveldt’s chosen first name is a tribute to the notorious seventeenth-century Hungarian Countess Erzsébet Báthory, known for her alleged vampiric tendencies. Interestingly, both women share the same birthday and initials. In addition to the countess, Baerveldt is fascinated by other historically significant women, including Mary Magdalene, Lucrezia Borgia, Mona Lisa, and Ophelia.

Through her work, Baerveldt illuminates the eternal struggle between nature and the human psyche. She finds endless inspiration in the history, religion, and mythology of the world, all of which deserve a fresh perspective. In her depictions of epic stories, Baerveldt delves into the two extremes of the human condition: the lust for power and the inevitability of mortality. No matter how much power or knowledge we may acquire, no one can escape suffering or unravel the mysteries of life and death.

www.ftn-books.com has some important Baerveldt specials for sale.