Photo de l'auteur

Marco Livingstone

Auteur de David Hockney (World of Art)

63+ oeuvres 975 utilisateurs 6 critiques 1 Favoris

A propos de l'auteur

Marco Livingstone is an American-born art historian and critic living in England. Since 1991 he has worked full-time as an independent curator and writer. He has organized numerous exhibitions including two large surveys of Pop Art and retrospectives of major British and American artists.

Œuvres de Marco Livingstone

David Hockney (World of Art) (1981) 201 exemplaires
Le Pop art (1990) 112 exemplaires
The Essential Duane Michals (1997) 87 exemplaires
Hockney's People (1877) 78 exemplaires
Kitaj (1992) 37 exemplaires
Red Grooms (2004) 29 exemplaires
Patrick Caulfield: Paintings (1999) 26 exemplaires
R.B. Kitaj (1985) 25 exemplaires
George Segal (1997) 18 exemplaires
Duane Hanson (1994) 14 exemplaires
David Hockney : Space and Line (1999) 13 exemplaires
Arthur Tress: Talisman (1986) 13 exemplaires
Jim Dine Flowers and Plants (1994) 12 exemplaires
Jim Dine: The Alchemy of Images (1998) 12 exemplaires
Allen Jones: Prints (Art & Design) (1995) 11 exemplaires
Peter Blake (2009) 10 exemplaires
David Hockney, espace, paysage (1999) 10 exemplaires
My Yorkshire (2011) 6 exemplaires
Tony Bevan (1998) 6 exemplaires
Michael Craig-Martin: Prints (2004) 5 exemplaires
Richard Woods (2006) 4 exemplaires
Nouveau realisme: Spring 2000 (2000) 3 exemplaires
Joe Tilson (2023) 3 exemplaires
David Hockney : Egyptian journeys (2002) 3 exemplaires
Pop imagery (2013) 2 exemplaires
Patrick Caulfield, 5-29 June 2013 (2013) 2 exemplaires
Jim Dine Gottingen-Paris (2004) 2 exemplaires
David Hockney: An Intimate Eye (2004) 2 exemplaires
Bevan Tony - Paintings (2003) 1 exemplaire
Post Pop: East Meets West (2014) 1 exemplaire

Oeuvres associées

Modern Art: Impressionism to Post-Modernism (1989) — Contributeur — 157 exemplaires
Duane Hanson: A survey of his work from the '30s to the '90s (1999)quelques éditions; quelques éditions16 exemplaires
Jim Dine: The Photographs, So Far (Vol. 1 - 4) (v. 1-4) (2003) — Contributeur, quelques éditions12 exemplaires
Caulfield, Patrick: Paintings, 1963-1992 (Art & Design) (1992)quelques éditions10 exemplaires
Anish Kapoor (Art Random, 28) (1991) — Directeur de publication; Directeur de publication — 7 exemplaires

Étiqueté

Partage des connaissances

Date de naissance
1952
Sexe
male
Professions
art historian

Membres

Critiques

David Hockney, 20th century British painter
 
Signalé
Docent-MFAStPete | May 27, 2024 |

This work of art is vintage Red Grooms -a feast for the eyes: to list several: the fire engine sooooo long it can't fit in the rectangular frame; the Dalmation chomping a woman's butt; that woman with wild curly grey hair has the face of a granny; the fireman in front wears a Charles Dickens Christmas Carrol top hat; the bold number 5 on the fire engine echoes The Figure 5 in Gold, famous 1928 painting by American artist Charles Demuth.

What a treasure! Thank you, Rizzoli New York for this marvelous coffee-table book with hundreds of large color plates of the creations of American multimedia artist Red Grooms (Born 1937), without question an artist possessing one of the most spectacular, outlandish, over-the-top visual imaginations of all time. Also includes are three essays - from author/painter Timothy Human, art critic Marco Livningstone and philosopher of art Arthur C. Danto. The essay by Danto is nothing short of brilliant and it this essay The World as Ruckus – Red Grooms and the Spirit of Comedy I quote below along with adding my own modest comments.

“The term ruckus in any case fits the style – the way Grooms applies and uses cartoony exaggerations. In a way, his characteristic works are three-dimensional cartoons, and, whatever its motivation, the ruckus is intended as a form of comedy, by contrast with the typical piece of installation art, which in general takes itself pretty seriously.” ----------- Some years back I had the good fortune to see a Red Grooms exhibit - many where the times I smiled; many where the times I laughed. A gallery should put up a sign at the entrance to a Red Grooms exhibit: SOURPUSSES KEEP OUT.

“I would dearly love to see Grooms make a piece based on Plato’s Symposium, showing Alcibiades staggering in with the help of a flute-girl, ivy twisted in his golden hair.” --------- So would I, Arthur! Anytime you encounter an event or activity where the participants are taking themselves and others much too seriously, imagine the whole thing rendered as a Red Grooms.

“A lot of Groom’s work is about art; he has an immense and an affectionate knowledge of art history, and he likes to use his art to make statements about its history and his own relationship to it. Often these meta-artistic works are extremely illuminating about the work they take as their subject.” ---------- Case in point, the Jackson Pollock below. And further down, the Willem De Kooning and the Piet Mondrian. I'm especially fond of the sculpture where Mondrian is enclosed in a three-dimensional version of his painting.


Jackson in Action

“Grooms’s art has the form it has because of the response it is intended to have, with laughter as the outward manifestation of the change of inner state.” ----------- Once you make a connection with a Red Grooms creation, it will stick with you for years.


Philadelphia Cornucopia

“Grooms in some way makes his figures look ridiculous, even laughable, but he does not give himself an air of superiority in doing so because he makes his own work look proportionately ludicrous or laughable. ---------- There's nothing condescending about the artist's humor. Red Grooms puts his heart right out there along with his imagination and lives, via his art, with the men and women he creates.


Joltin' Joe Takes a Swing

“When the elevator doors of the Whitney Museum opened on Groom’s retrospective exhibition in 1987, I felt such an inrush of pleasure that I could not help but think – after all, mine, as you can tell, is in large measure the world of the professional philosopher – of Thomas Hobbes’s piquant definition of laughter in The Leviathan: laughter is “sudden glory.” For in a way that is what I felt: a flash of aesthetic glory.” ---------- Bulls-eye, Arthur! My experience exactly. And there's no aesthetic experience like one of aesthetic glory. If you spend a good hunk of time with Red Grooms, you will feel ten years younger. Guaranteed!

“In order for comedy to do its therapeutic work, it has to be accessible. The audience has to recognize what the work is about, and recognize itself in the work, as if in a mirror. The truth cannot be hidden, or be obscure.” ----------- There's no question, like the stories and art in the books of Dr. Seuss, the art of Red Grooms can be instantly understood.



‘His wonderful comic style was not intended at any point to degrade or ridicule its subjects but to present them with warmth by removing what might have been taken as fearful. The subway can be seen as a great iron dragon that worms through the dark underground beneath the city. Grooms shows it instead as comical and ingratiating, noting to be afraid of but as embodying, to use again Hegel’s description, “a fundamentally happy craziness, folly, and idiosyncrasy in general.”” ---------- The above Red Grooms subway sculpture allows the viewer to get on the subway and walk through. Yes, that's right - life-size and life-like. What a blast and a half.


Willem De Kooning


Sculpture of Piet Mondrian


Red Grooms
… (plus d'informations)
 
Signalé
Glenn_Russell | 1 autre critique | Nov 13, 2018 |
What a treasure! Thank you, Rizzoli New York for this marvelous coffee-table book with hundreds of large color plates of the creations of American multimedia artist Red Grooms (Born 1937), without question an artist possessing one of the most spectacular, outlandish, over-the-top visual imaginations of all time. Also includes are three essays - from author/painter Timothy Human, art critic Marco Livningstone and philosopher of art Arthur C. Danto. The essay by Danto is nothing short of brilliant and it this essay The World as Ruckus – Red Grooms and the Spirit of Comedy I quote below along with adding my own modest comments.

“The term ruckus in any case fits the style – the way Grooms applies and uses cartoony exaggerations. In a way, his characteristic works are three-dimensional cartoons, and, whatever its motivation, the ruckus is intended as a form of comedy, by contrast with the typical piece of installation art, which in general takes itself pretty seriously.” ----------- Some years back I had the good fortune to see a Red Grooms exhibit - many where the times I smiled; many where the times I laughed. A gallery should put up a sign at the entrance to a Red Grooms exhibit: SOURPUSSES KEEP OUT.

“I would dearly love to see Grooms make a piece based on Plato’s Symposium, showing Alcibiades staggering in with the help of a flute-girl, ivy twisted in his golden hair.” --------- So would I, Arthur! Anytime you encounter an event or activity where the participants are taking themselves and others much too seriously, imagine the whole thing rendered as a Red Grooms.

“A lot of Groom’s work is about art; he has an immense and an affectionate knowledge of art history, and he likes to use his art to make statements about its history and his own relationship to it. Often these meta-artistic works are extremely illuminating about the work they take as their subject.” ---------- Jackson Pollock, Willem De Kooning, Piet Mondrian. I'm especially fond of the sculpture where Mondrian is enclosed in a three-dimensional version of his painting.

“Grooms’s art has the form it has because of the response it is intended to have, with laughter as the outward manifestation of the change of inner state.” ----------- Once you make a connection with a Red Grooms creation, it will stick with you for years.

“Grooms in some way makes his figures look ridiculous, even laughable, but he does not give himself an air of superiority in doing so because he makes his own work look proportionately ludicrous or laughable. ---------- There's nothing condescending about the artist's humor. Red Grooms puts his heart right out there along with his imagination and lives, via his art, with the men and women he creates.

“When the elevator doors of the Whitney Museum opened on Groom’s retrospective exhibition in 1987, I felt such an inrush of pleasure that I could not help but think – after all, mine, as you can tell, is in large measure the world of the professional philosopher – of Thomas Hobbes’s piquant definition of laughter in The Leviathan: laughter is “sudden glory.” For in a way that is what I felt: a flash of aesthetic glory.” ---------- Bulls-eye, Arthur! My experience exactly. And there's no aesthetic experience like one of aesthetic glory. If you spend a good hunk of time with Red Grooms, you will feel ten years younger. Guaranteed!

“In order for comedy to do its therapeutic work, it has to be accessible. The audience has to recognize what the work is about, and recognize itself in the work, as if in a mirror. The truth cannot be hidden, or be obscure.” ----------- There's no question, like the stories and art in the books of Dr. Seuss, the art of Red Grooms can be instantly understood.

‘His wonderful comic style was not intended at any point to degrade or ridicule its subjects but to present them with warmth by removing what might have been taken as fearful. The subway can be seen as a great iron dragon that worms through the dark underground beneath the city. Grooms shows it instead as comical and ingratiating, noting to be afraid of but as embodying, to use again Hegel’s description, “a fundamentally happy craziness, folly, and idiosyncrasy in general.”” ---------- Red Grooms's subway sculpture allows the viewer to get on the subway and walk through. Yes, that's right - life-size and life-like. What a blast and a half.
… (plus d'informations)
 
Signalé
GlennRussell | 1 autre critique | Mar 28, 2017 |

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Statistiques

Œuvres
63
Aussi par
6
Membres
975
Popularité
#26,422
Évaluation
½ 4.3
Critiques
6
ISBN
99
Langues
5
Favoris
1

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