A few weeks ago, my rakish colonial
gentleman presented me with Pastel
Portraits: Images of 18th-Century Europe, a beautiful book published by Yale
University Press to accompany the 2011 exhibition of rarely-exhibited pastels
at the metropolitan Museum of Art, New York.
Unfortunately I
missed that particular exhibition because the Met is more than a scant carriage
ride away from Gin Lane, so I relished the chance to see some of the wonderful
items that were exhibited, alongside the perceptive and very informative text
commentary by Katharine Baetjer and Marjorie Shelley.
Although this is a very slender book, it packs an enormous
amount of information into the pages but is never anything less than
accessible, entertaining and suitable to those, like me, who are far from experts in this intriguing
field. The production values are wonderful and the book is illustrated
throughout with vibrant colour reproductions of the works under discussion
The book, published in 2011, is widely available and
reasonably priced too; I cannot recommend it highly enough!
4 comments:
I really admire those people who can produce pastel pictures without making a mess. It's a wonderful medium but oh! the places it manages to get...
Are you a pastellist? I have absolutely zero artistic ability...
Thank you ever so much for this heads up! Beautiful portraits of beautiful people ! Oh my!
It's one of those books you just keep looking at!
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