Photo de l'auteur

Rockwell Kent (1882–1971)

Auteur de N by E

42+ oeuvres 1,009 utilisateurs 9 critiques 1 Favoris

A propos de l'auteur

Crédit image: Kent wearing a coat and vest, annotated on reverse: "Rockwell Kent, author of "Wilderness", Putnam", photographer unknown. Kent, Rockwell, 1882-1971

Œuvres de Rockwell Kent

N by E (1930) 245 exemplaires
World-Famous Paintings (1930) 212 exemplaires
Salamina (1935) 72 exemplaires
A Northern Christmas (1941) 48 exemplaires
This is my own (1940) 21 exemplaires
The View from Asgaard: Rockwell Kent's Adirondack Legacy (1999) — Illustrateur — 17 exemplaires
Greenland journal 16 exemplaires
Rockwell Kent on Monhegan (1998) 4 exemplaires
A birthday book 3 exemplaires
Of Men and Mountains 2 exemplaires
What is an American? 1 exemplaire
Creative Art — Directeur de publication — 1 exemplaire

Oeuvres associées

Moby Dick (2014) — Illustrateur, quelques éditions35,641 exemplaires
The Illustrated Stratford Shakespeare (1589) — Illustrateur, quelques éditions31,810 exemplaires
Les Contes de Canterbury (0014) — Illustrateur, quelques éditions22,023 exemplaires
Candide (1759) — Illustrateur, quelques éditions20,586 exemplaires
Feuilles d'herbe (1855) — Illustrateur, quelques éditions10,316 exemplaires
Henry IV, Part 1 (1598) — Illustrateur, quelques éditions5,060 exemplaires
Le Pont du roi Saint-Louis (1927) — Illustrateur, quelques éditions4,781 exemplaires
Outerbridge Reach (1992) — Illustrateur, quelques éditions520 exemplaires
Le retour de Casanova (1918) — Illustrateur, quelques éditions320 exemplaires
Candide (1759) — Illustrateur, quelques éditions300 exemplaires
The Mountains Wait (1942) — Avant-propos, quelques éditions25 exemplaires
A Treasury of Sea Stories (1948) — Illustrateur, quelques éditions; Contributeur — 20 exemplaires
Americana Esoterica (1927) — Illustrateur — 16 exemplaires
The book of noble thoughts (1946) — Illustrateur — 4 exemplaires
From the Soul: American Works on Paper — Contributeur — 1 exemplaire

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This book is full of great paintings; a wonderful volume to enjoy on a snowy day. Rockwell as an art critic......I just can't agree with him on a lot of things. I also have to question him for inaccuracies; when he is bitching about "Monna Pomona", he goes off on a rant about the personal life of Dante Gabriel Rossetti and his relationship with Eleanor Siddal. Okay, close, she was Elizabeth Eleanor Siddal, known as Lizzie, but shouldn't an art critic keep this stuff straight, especially when the woman was a sort of supermodel to the Pre-Rapaelites?

Oh, and by the way, whoever stole the print of Albert Joseph Moore's "A Summer Night" from this piece of public property......shame on you!
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Signalé
Equestrienne | 3 autres critiques | Jan 5, 2021 |
In the closing months of the Great War during the autumn of 1918, an artist and his 9 year-old son turned their backs on "civilization" and spent about 6 months on a remote island in Alaska. The father painted and read Homer while the son chased foxes and ran around in the snow exploring the island. It's a beautiful little book that captures the mood of the time and place. It reminded me of going with my father to a fishing camp in Canada years ago (the camp we went to was built in the 1920s). By this time the recent improvements of the small marine outboard motor, and the airplane, made it possible for more people to travel the waterways of the northern wilderness without mounting a long expedition and so began a new tourist industry of which Kent was among the first wave.

The book is illustrated by Kent including a Robert Louis Stevenson-like map of the island and surrounding areas with hand written notes, it's evocative of adventure. It's a real place that is easily found just outside Seward on Google Maps. I listened to the book read by David Wales of LibriVox and it's also freely available on Internet Archive.
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Signalé
Stbalbach | 2 autres critiques | Jan 12, 2015 |
N by E is a near perfect reading experience: a fascinating story, a captivating writing style, consistently beautiful and abundant illustrations, and all brought together in a striking hardcover edition. Rockwell Kent, to paraphrase a common description of the wolverine, was 500 pounds of attitude in a 150 pound body. He was most imposing when he encountered (or fomented his own) adversity. This 1929 voyage from Nova Scotia to Greenland in a 10 meter boat, in the company of a shipmate that he held in utter contempt, provides ample adversity for Kent and his writing to come alive. Here he describes the night watch:

Invariably as the darkness came, the sky was overcast with fog or cloud; and instead of exulting in the splendor of starlit heavens I shivered through interminable hours in the contemplation of nothing at all, yet ever straining my mind toward the annihilation of time and the achievement of some helpful disbelief in the reality of my bodily misery. It was cold - oh, bitterly!

Once they "hit" Greenland, the story and the writing wane, in fact his interactions with the Greenlanders, seen through a modern lens, leave one feeling somewhat uneasy.
Nevertheless, with its mix of prose and pictures, the book is a wonderfully immersive experience. As Kent serves up meals in stormy seas, jury rigs broken gaff jaws, learns on the fly to navigate unerringly across the foggy expanse of the Labrador Sea, and all of this in addition to writing, painting, drawing, and even playing the flute, one is awed by how capable and gifted a man he was. Truly, as has been said about him, he was someone with a way of "getting things done".
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1 voter
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maritimer | 1 autre critique | Mar 30, 2013 |

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Statistiques

Œuvres
42
Aussi par
17
Membres
1,009
Popularité
#25,561
Évaluation
3.9
Critiques
9
ISBN
38
Langues
1
Favoris
1

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