Peter Lanyon transformed the art of landscape; rescuing it from the picturesque and bringing it back to the centre as a radical practice capable of expressing radical ideas. In this book; Andrew Causey sets out to explain just what this transformation involved. Offering new reflections on Lanyonrsquo;s relationship with both American art and post-war Paris; he suggests how Lanyonrsquo;s art should be situated internationally in the post-Second World War period. A central concern of the book is to re-examine lsquo;St Ivesrsquo; with which Lanyon is traditionally associated. Causey argues that this association encloses and limits Lanyon; who was an artist of broader ambition and wider cast of mind than most; if not all; of his colleagues there.Lanyonrsquo;s concern with regional identity and his resistance to what he saw as a history of outside exploitation of his native western Cornwall; was integral to his rejection of the picturesque in landscape painting. Causey draws on recent work by cultural geographers; anthropologists and archaeologists to explain Lanyonrsquo;s relationship with the landscape and the pre-capitalist social economy of his region. He argues that Lanyon is an exception to the European tradition of landscape where painting has been concerned mainly with ownership and leisure and not work. Yet Lanyonrsquo;s pictures were about local historical industries such as mining; farming and fishing which had more or less disappeared by the 1950s.Causey examines the elegiac nature of some of Lanyonrsquo;s early work and asks to what extent his experience of war; death and physical destruction map onto his presentation of the imagery of western Cornwall. He also looks at how far Lanyon should be associated with the new American painting and the search for the sublime; and suggests a need to reshape language relating to landscape art to make it appropriate for Lanyonrsquo;s period.
#2888673 in eBooks 2013-04-03 2013-04-03File Name: B00C7127D8
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0 of 0 people found the following review helpful. brilliant dark hilarious disturbing original play from a brilliant originalBy A. Greenbrilliant dark hilarious disturbing original play from a brilliant original voice0 of 0 people found the following review helpful. greatBy Penny KoutsiFast shipping; great quality