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- <text id=94TT1779>
- <title>
- Dec. 19, 1994: Books:Speaking Volumes
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1994
- Dec. 19, 1994 Uncle Scrooge
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- ARTS & MEDIA/BOOKS, Page 68
- Speaking Volumes
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p> A selection of holiday gift books that celebrate beauties,
- beasts, bric-a-brac, bygone eras and modern buckaroos
- </p>
- <p> NORMAN PARKINSON: PHOTOGRAPHS 1935-1990 (Rizzoli; $65). "I
- do not promote the idea that photography is an art form," said
- the late British fashion photographer, who attributed his
- success to "hobgoblins that live inside the camera." An impish
- lightness of being animates these superb images, all of them
- marked by a sure sense of the elegant line, be it the pose of
- a long-legged beauty or the curvaceous fuselage of a 1930s
- airliner.
- </p>
- <p> STATIONS: AN IMAGINARY JOURNEY by Michael Flanagan
- (Pantheon; $21). The artist-author carries us back to Old
- Virginny with a dual-media performance: 38 paintings of bygone
- railroads and Shenandoah Valley townscapes juxtaposed with a
- 50-page story about the love affair between Anna, an enigmatic
- artist, and Russell, a photographer and train buff. The
- meticulous paintings depict Russell's old photographs, complete
- with creases and torn edges. The text is the reminiscence of an
- apocryphal ex-newspaperman whose attempt to reconstruct a
- forgotten romance resurrects family secrets and American
- history. This is an original example of Proust's observation
- that "the memory of a particular image is but regret for a
- particular moment."
- </p>
- <p> THE HISTORY OF DECORATIVE ARTS: THE RENAISSANCE AND
- MANNERISM IN EUROPE edited by Alain Gruber (Abbeville; $150).
- And the Lavishly Illustrated Award for 1994 goes to this first
- of a projected three-volume history of the decorative arts.
- Eight hundred plates, 500 in color, display ornamental works
- (painting, sculpture, furniture, textiles, ceramics and other
- glorious gewgaws) created between 1480 and 1630, a period in
- which European craftsman broke with the aesthetics of the Middle
- Ages and looked to antiquity for inspiration. This collection
- is stunning evidence that they found it.
- </p>
- <p> WIRE, text by Suzanne Slesin and Daniel Rozensztroch
- (Abbeville; $29.95), traces the 300-year history of utilitarian
- and decorative wirework from that of 17th century Slovak tinkers
- to the factory-made implements of the early 20th century. Many
- of these varied and whimsical shapes, collected and attractively
- arranged by the editors, were last seen in Grandma's house.
- Singled out or clustered in more than 300 photos, these whisks,
- racks, beaters (egg and rug), cages, baskets, candelabrums and
- hand-held toasters are reminders of a stable domestic world now
- bent out of shape.
- </p>
- <p> BLUE DOG by George Rodrigue and Lawrence S. Freundlich
- (Viking; $45). The hottest Louisiana purchase since the
- paperback rights to Anne Rice's vampire novels is a Blue Dog
- painting by the canny Cajun artist George Rodrigue, whose
- striking work can be found not only at his New Orleans gallery
- but also in Carmel, California, and abroad. Posed with barnyard
- animals or buxom nudes, Blue Dog is a captivating and mysterious
- mutt who stares out at readers with zonky yellow eyes. Did
- someone put hashish in her biscuits? No. As B.D. "explains," she
- is the cerulean ghost of the artist's departed four-legged
- companion Tiffany, now channeled back to inhabit her beloved
- master's work. Old timey with a New Age angle, this Bayou bowwow
- should get a good run for your money.
- </p>
- <p> COWBOYS & IMAGES: THE WATERCOLORS OF WILLIAM MATTHEWS
- (Chronicle Books; $40). One first notices the hats--wide and
- weathered like Western landscapes--covering all or most of the
- subjects' faces. Matthews paints great hats. Undoubtedly, he
- could do as well with what is under them, but his aim in this
- lyric portrait series is to convey the essence of buckaroo: the
- shoulder slouch, the pelvic hitch, the loose assemblage of bone
- and muscle shifting beneath coarse, stained cloth. The Colorado
- artist hits the bull's-eye nearly every time, a feat all the
- more impressive considering his medium: the difficult, one-shot
- art of watercolors.
- </p>
- <p> WILDLIFE: THE NATURE PAINTINGS OF CARL BRENDERS (Abrams;
- $29.95). Species may be becoming extinct at a rapid rate, but
- nature painters still survive in record numbers. The
- Belgian-born Brenders appears to have flourished by expanding
- his range. The detailed realism of these 50 renderings of North
- American animals is startlingly similar to that of wildlife
- photography. The appeal is in the recognition that it is
- not--that these life studies of deer, wolves, cougars, bears and
- birds are the work of a clear, polished eye and a rock-steady
- hand.
- </p>
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
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