




Picasso Linoleum Cuts [Metropolitan Museum of Art] on desertcart.com. *FREE* shipping on qualifying offers. Picasso Linoleum Cuts Review: Five Stars - Wonderful book. Review: A Top Reference Book on Picasso Linoleum Cuts - This book, wonderfully featuring the Mr. & Mrs. Charles Kramer collection of Pablo Picasso Linoleum Cuts at The Metropolitan Museum of Art is brillantly laid out with good description, faithful reproduction of Picasso's greatest body of graphic art, his linocuts, and with a good forward. It also has some ten ceramic plates and Picasso's exhibition posters. There is an error in the edition, on at least one linocut, and the notes, commentary, and prose could have included more, but overall, a great reference book on Pablo Picasso Linoleum Cuts. 9.3/ 10 ***** One of the best in print. [email protected]
| Best Sellers Rank | #2,644,288 in Books ( See Top 100 in Books ) #101,738 in Crafts & Hobbies (Books) |
| Customer Reviews | 4.7 4.7 out of 5 stars (6) |
| Dimensions | 9.88 x 0.96 x 12.13 inches |
| Edition | First Edition |
| ISBN-10 | 039454692X |
| ISBN-13 | 978-0394546926 |
| Item Weight | 2.8 pounds |
| Language | English |
| Print length | 166 pages |
| Publication date | April 12, 1985 |
| Publisher | Random House, Inc. |
S**H
Five Stars
Wonderful book.
S**M
A Top Reference Book on Picasso Linoleum Cuts
This book, wonderfully featuring the Mr. & Mrs. Charles Kramer collection of Pablo Picasso Linoleum Cuts at The Metropolitan Museum of Art is brillantly laid out with good description, faithful reproduction of Picasso's greatest body of graphic art, his linocuts, and with a good forward. It also has some ten ceramic plates and Picasso's exhibition posters. There is an error in the edition, on at least one linocut, and the notes, commentary, and prose could have included more, but overall, a great reference book on Pablo Picasso Linoleum Cuts. 9.3/ 10 ***** One of the best in print. [email protected]
W**D
Beautiful and informative
Pablo Ruiz y Picasso worked in a remarkable number of media. His drypoint prints look like they were made by a man enraged, or more likely Spanish. These are some of his linocuts, obviously made by the same hand. First, please, don't dismiss block prints as kids' stuff. It's wonderful that the medium presents such a low technical barrier that it's accessible to many makers. That doesn't matter. A great artist can make better art with a charred stick than you or I can with a full studio. And he did. Some are white-line prints ("Painter and his Model"), some are black-line (page 133), and some ("Dancers and a Musician") are both. Many use multiple blocks ("Small Bacchanalia"), others ("Bulls in Vallauris") are single blocks or ("Family Scene") reduction prints a.k.a 'suicide' prints. Some are delicate ("Head of a Boy"), but most are bold. This is an amazing collection, with ten unique pages at the end. Clay impressions were taken from some of those blocks. They captured the individual tools marks in the original linocut, and showed just how his hand pulled each line from the lino surface. If you've ever made a block print, you will feel in your hand how Picasso created the image - an experience beyond words. I'm not the one to fault the master, but I have to ask: what was his artistic reason for not sharpening his tools? Again and again (images #110, 118, 82, and others), the linocuts show a jagged line where his gouge tore the surface. I know that linoleum blocks are fragile and break with use (#82 again), but the ragged edge was not necessary. Or was it? Anyway, it's a wonderful book. The color is good, the prints are incredible, technical information is adequate, and the commentary sinks out of sight. This book mostly just leaves you by yourself, with the beautiful prints. //wiredweird
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