You know those little free libraries that have popped up all over the place? Well, that's where I found this book. I decided to take it home when I saw how beautifully the paintings had been reproduced (although I'd never heard of the artist).
Neel qualifies as a character, which in my mind is good. Her self-portrait, a part of which appears on the cover, was drawn when she was 80 years old. She portrayed herself sitting on an arm chair holding paintbrush and rag but wearing only her glasses. Yep, nude. Not gorgeous, but realistic.
On page 13, we learn that, Like much of Neel's work over the course of five decades, the painting is happy to look wrong. . . . Neel's genius as a portraitist lay in her ability to excavate the character beneath the surface.
Then, on page 30, we read that in her paintings the female body is more real than imaginary; it is something that is lived in rather than something to be worshipped or desired. In Neel's painting of herself, as in her paintings of others, she portrays a unique body, the body a person acquires through a combination of genes, age, and experience.
One woman claimed that she had rejected the idea of modeling for Neel, explaining that she didn't want to come out looking like Dracula's daughter.
I'm glad to know a little about this artist, but I can't say that I'd want any of these paintings on my wall. The image of Andy Warhol portrays a soul in pain, and several of the other paintings captured the essence of a personality, but do I see what the artist intended?
This book is pretty much a perfect art book, from my perspective as an art ambassador and Ekphrastic poet. It is large (8.5 x 12"), but not heavy in terms of weight; all the written material is at the front so that the color plates are uninterrupted, and there are enough full-page, colored plates to quench the curiousity(pgs. 80-156). The written material itself is laid out beautifully and consists of three good essays and a transcript section in which the artist's models are interviewed in a group interview. Okay - now to the art itself - fascinating, unconventional portraiture that is sure to captivate the imagination even if one doesn't care for the style. I got a great response from an elderly woman with Alzheimer's - so much so that she asked to borrow the book! I'm happy to have discovered this important artist.
Did not have enough time to read thoroughly, but definitely want to go back to read more closely. Fantastic...a lot of information, a large selection of works, lots of photos, and much new information from what I've found in other books.