The Locator -- [(subject = "Twombly Cy--1928-2011")]

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Author:
Jacobus, Mary, author.
Title:
Reading Cy Twombly : poetry in paint / Mary Jacobus.
Publisher:
Princeton University Press,
Copyright Date:
2016
Description:
xi, 306 pages : illustrations (some color) ; 26 cm
Subject:
Twombly, Cy,--1928-2011--Criticism and interpretation.
Other Authors:
Twombly, Cy, 1928-2011, artist.
Notes:
Includes bibliographical references and index.
Contents:
Introduction: Twombly's books -- Mediterranean passages: retrospect -- Psychogram and Parnassus: how (not) to read a Twombly -- Twombly's vagueness: the poetics of abstraction -- Achilles's horses, Twombly's war -- Romantic Twombly -- The pastoral stain -- Psyche: the double door -- Twombly's lapse -- Postscript: writing in light.
Summary:
Many of Cy Twombly's paintings and drawings include handwritten words and phrases--naming or quoting poets ranging from Sappho, Homer, and Virgil to Mallarme, Rilke, and Cavafy. Enigmatic and sometimes hard to decipher, these inscriptions are a distinctive feature of his work. Reading Cy Twombly poses both literary and art historical questions. How does poetic reference in largely abstract works affect their interpretation? Reading Cy Twombly is the first book to focus specifically on the artist's use of poetry. Twombly's library formed an extension of his studio and he sometimes painted with a book open in front of him. Drawing on original research in an archive that includes his paint-stained and annotated books, Mary Jacobus's account--richly illustrated with more than 125 color and black-and-white images--unlocks an important aspect of Twombly's practice. Jacobus shows that poetry was an indispensable source of reference throughout Twombly's career; as he said, he "never really separated painting and literature." Among much else, she explores the influence of Ezra Pound and Charles Olson; Twombly's fondness for Greek pastoral poetry and Virgil's Eclogues; the inspiration of the Iliad and Ovid's Metamorphoses; and Twombly's love of Keats and his collaboration with Octavio Paz. Twombly's art reveals both his distinctive relationship to poetry and his use of quotation to solve formal problems. A modern painter, he belongs in a critical tradition that goes back, by way of Roland Barthes, to Baudelaire. [This book] opens up fascinating new readings of some of the most important paintings and drawings of the twentieth century. -- Inside jacket flap.
ISBN:
069117072X
9780691170725
OCLC:
(OCoLC)926050597
LCCN:
2015038608
Locations:
USUX851 -- Iowa State University - Parks Library (Ames)
OVUX522 -- University of Iowa Libraries (Iowa City)
GLAX641 -- Marshalltown Community College Library (Marshalltown)

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