True to Life: Twenty-Five Years of Conversations with David Hockney

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Product Details
Price
$31.95
Publisher
University of California Press
Publish Date
Pages
272
Dimensions
6.02 X 8.04 X 0.78 inches | 1.28 pounds
Language
English
Type
Paperback
EAN/UPC
9780520258792

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About the Author
Lawrence Weschler, a staff writer for twenty years at the New Yorker, is the Director of the New York Institute of the Humanities at New York University and Artistic Director of the Chicago Humanities Festival.
Reviews
"The artist's process has never been better charted."-- "Bookforum"
Starred Review: "Hockney is a fascinating and surprising character, claiming that the stakes are no less than 'the utter subversion of the tyrannical hegemony of traditional one-point perspective, ' but also grounded enough to declare, 'if art isn't playful, it's nothing.'. . . Weschler rewards his readers with lengthy quotes, an overwhelming wealth of knowledge and a lively narrative style."-- "Publishers Weekly"
"Seeing Is Forgetting [on Robert Irwin, UC Press] and True to Life are not only about the artists talking to Weschler or, through him, to each other; they're about the artists talking to themselves."--David Ulin, "Los Angeles Times Book Review"
"Aside from being a terrific writer, Weschler is clearly a great listener and interviewer."-- "San Diego Union-Tribune"
"Taken together, Weschler's two books [True to Life, and Seeing is Forgetting the Name of the Thing One Sees on Robert Irwin, UC Press] amount to an engaging argument about visual culture and its possibilities. They shift the reader several levels above the peevish bickering that often deadens cultural discussion and remind us that contemporary art, on some of its best days, draws us into the midst of debates that are wonderfully creative and crucially important while nevertheless unresolvable--and also, like a Hockney drawing, deeply and seriously charming."-- "National Post"
"Overall, the Hockney/Weschler conversations provide an astonishing record of Hockney's exploration of "the structure of seeing" itself and offer a window on his work. To Weschler's credit, he also includes a few critical responses to some of the projects. . . . His ability to present and comment upon the artistic process without bogging it down in superfluous critical commentary, allows his essays to help us think about what creativity is in the broadest sense." -- "Leonardo"