Leonardo's Nephew: Essays on Art and Artists

Front Cover
University of Chicago Press, 2000 - Art - 283 pages
James Fenton, one of England's most gifted poets, has in recent years been looking closely at works of art and writing incisively and inventively about them and their creators. This collection of fifteen writings discusses a wide range of painting and sculpture, from the mummy portraits of ancient Egypt to the works of Robert Rauschenberg and Jasper Johns.

"Ingenious. . . . Intrigued by emerging and unstable reputations, [Fenton] introduces us to Leonardo da Vinci's half-brother's son Pierino: a precocious sculptor celebrated by Vasari but virtually forgotten since."—Publishers Weekly

"Not surprisingly, Fenton displays throughout the passionate attentiveness of a scholar, the enthusiasm of an amateur, and the urbane cleverness of an English journalist."—Washington Post Book World

"[Fenton] is not, like Baudelaire, a poet moonlighting as art critic; he is something else again—a poetic art historian." —Karen Wright, Observer

"These essays educate, enlighten, surprise and thrill, unfailingly."—Robin Lippincott, New York Times Book Review

From inside the book

Contents

The Mummys Secret
20
The Best of Both Worlds
41
Bernini at HarvardChicago Baroque
88
Who Was Thomas Jones?
103
Degas in the Evening
117
Degas in Chicago
135
Seurat and the Sewers
150
Becoming Picasso
185
Monuments to Every Moment
202
The Voracious
216
Notes
236
Index
269

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Roman Art
Peter Stewart
Snippet view - 2004

About the author (2000)

James Fenton has been a foreign correspondent & a theater critic & has written about the history of gardens. His book of poems, "Out of Danger", was published by Farrar, Straus & Giroux. He won the 2015 PEN/Pinter Prize for poetry. The award, established by English PEN in memory of Nobel-Laureate playwright Harold Pinter, is presented annually for outstanding literary merit by a British writer or writer resident in Britain.

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