A celebration of the richness of figurative painting over the last 100 years and a passionate critique of the accepted history of art in the 20th century
Figurative painting is due a reappraisal. In this passionately argued volume the distinguished writer and artist Timothy Hyman cuts a new path through the tangle of twentieth-century art. The World New Made explores the work of more than fifty individual painters, presenting a collective ‘Resistance’ who together offer a human-centred alternative to the dominance of the Abstract or the Conceptual in conventional narratives of modern art.
Structured not as a survey but as in-depth studies of more than 130 specific artworks, this lavishly illustrated book brings these often marginalized artists centre-stage: not just Alice Neel and Balthus, Max Beckmann and Frida Kahlo, but also Marsden Hartley and Charlotte Salomon, Bhupen Khakhar and Jacob Lawrence. A rich cast is brought to life, partly through their own writings. As the author argues, ‘All across the world, isolated artists found new idioms for human-centred painting in the midst of modern life.’
'A thing of beauty' Sunday Times
'Magnificently illustrated, this is art history at its most eye-popping and also – thanks to philosophical forays in which Hyman explores identity and the friction between self and society – its most brain-tickling' Observer (Peter Conrad's Books of the Year)
'Magnificent ... will change forever our sense of the “story” of modern art ' Gabriel Josipovici
'Highly original ... there are brilliant insights and connections on every page' David Bindman
Contents List
Introduction: Painting and Experience in the Twentieth Century 1. After Cubism: Reinventing the Language of Representation 2. After Expressionism: ‘The New Thingness’ 3. First-Person Painting 4. Beyond the Formalist Canon: Visionaries, Dreamers, Outsiders 5. After Abstract Expressionism: Towards a New History PaintingEpilogue: Continuous Narratives