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Art Objects (1995)

par Jeanette Winterson

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811527,105 (3.9)6
Jeanette Winterson argues in this collection for the importance of art in all our lives. In ten intertwined essays, the acclaimed author of such recent novels as Written on the Body and Art & Lies proposes art as an active force in the world - neither elitist nor remote, available to those who want it and affecting even those who don't.An act of courage and effrontery, a uniquely human endeavor that defies time and differences, art offers new realities, emotions and worlds to anyone prepared to meet the demands it places on us. Art objects to the lie that life is small, fragmented and mean. Art objects to the myth of inevitable decay. Winterson's eloquent vision of objecting, transforming, exuberant art is presented in pieces on painting, autobiography, style and the future of fiction. She also declares her admiration for Modernism and examines the writing of Virginia Woolf, T. S. Eliot and Gertrude Stein. More personally, she confronts the current fascination with the writer's life or sexuality instead of the work itself, and describes her relationship to her own fiction.… (plus d'informations)
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» Voir aussi les 6 mentions

5 sur 5
Prelepo skrojeni eseji. Wintersonva je majstor jezika i to se ovde oseća. Malo nervira udaljavanje od fenomenalnog eseja o slikama na početku knjige, ali opet, ne možeš očekivati od pisca opsednutog jezikom da slikama i ostalim oblicima umetnosti posveti celu knjigu. ( )
  p.vasic | Jan 2, 2024 |
For the most part, I really loved. this book and it makes me want to be a less lazy reader and challenge myself more with my choices. Much to think about here though at times I found her to be rather pretentious and annoying. ( )
  viviennestrauss | Jun 24, 2015 |
I loved Jeanette Winterson's opening address for the 2008 Sydney Writers' Festival this year, and perhaps even more her chat with Romana Koval on the ABC's Book Show, which covered some of the same ground. So I picked Art Objects up with hope in my heart. The book and I got off to a bad start with the epigraph, 'If truth is that which lasts, then ...': I muttered under my breath, 'If truth has nothing to do with lasting or otherwise, then there's no point reading the rest of that sentence.' But after that initial skirmish I was, alternately, putty in Jeanette's hands or driven nuts by her indulgences. The thread that runs through this collection of essays is an argument for taking art seriously, for the need for the reader or viewer of art to work. This is wonderful, and there are bright flashes of insight on every page. She's a brilliant and passionate advocate for things that are very dear to my heart, and yet ... somehow her pentecostal rhapsodies leave me cold, and on occasion her self-proclaimed love for words can be hard to distinguish from love of the sound of her own voice. It's probably telling that having read her lively, intelligent, lyrical essays on Gertrude Stein and Virginia Woolf, I felt not the slightest stirrings of desire to read any of their works.

The book's voice often shifts into preacherly cadences. Teresa Nielsen Hayden memorably said in her classic blog post, Things I Believe: 'I believe we’re bound to occasionally confuse God with His creation. The part of creation I most frequently confuse with God is the English language.' Jeanette Winterson should be forgiven if she occasionally makes the same mistake, and preaches accordingly.
[http://homepage.mac.com/shawjonathan/iblog/] ( )
  shawjonathan | Jul 20, 2008 |
Jeanette Winterson has a lot of nerve. She sees herself and her work as a sort of logical next step in the development of literary modernism. The essays in this collection are a way of explaining this lineage, and reveal her physical, lyrical, visceral attachments to language, books, art. Her way of writing about Virginia Woolf and Gertrude Stein is unlike anything one usually finds when looking at "criticism"; it's more personal, more intuitive, than that. If you are a devoted fan of her fiction, this collection is worth reading for the ways it illuminates (and sometimes obscures) the way Winterson approaches her art. If you care about the way we experience the aesthetic, the ways we think about and engage with art of all kinds, you won't be disappointed by this read. You may disagree with her, and may find her, well, effrontery rather incredible, but the richness of her prose and the strength of her insight are worth the effort. ( )
  DawnFinley | Jul 1, 2006 |
The title essay is outstanding. An excellent argument for the importance of art. ( )
  woctune | Oct 31, 2005 |
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Winterson, Jeanetteauteur principaltoutes les éditionsconfirmé
Noorman, JelleTraducteurauteur secondairequelques éditionsconfirmé
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Jeanette Winterson argues in this collection for the importance of art in all our lives. In ten intertwined essays, the acclaimed author of such recent novels as Written on the Body and Art & Lies proposes art as an active force in the world - neither elitist nor remote, available to those who want it and affecting even those who don't.An act of courage and effrontery, a uniquely human endeavor that defies time and differences, art offers new realities, emotions and worlds to anyone prepared to meet the demands it places on us. Art objects to the lie that life is small, fragmented and mean. Art objects to the myth of inevitable decay. Winterson's eloquent vision of objecting, transforming, exuberant art is presented in pieces on painting, autobiography, style and the future of fiction. She also declares her admiration for Modernism and examines the writing of Virginia Woolf, T. S. Eliot and Gertrude Stein. More personally, she confronts the current fascination with the writer's life or sexuality instead of the work itself, and describes her relationship to her own fiction.

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