William Cumming - The Image of Consequence (Hardcover, Deluxe ed.)


William Cumming (b. 1917) is one of the most complex and contradictory American artists of the past century. Painter, correspondent, art and music critic, educator, memoirist, and loquacious interview subject, Cumming is heard here in his own words and through art critic Matthew Kangas, who brings together 140 crucial works and situates Cumming in the cultural context of his times - artistic, social, and political, including his years in the Communist Party USA. Unaffected by decades of rapid stylistic changes in the art world, Cumming remained committed to the image of consequence -- socially relevant subject matter -- through the Great Depression, the "lost years" of World War II, and the Cold War. He then embraced a renewed sense of life, hope, and a second "conversion" to modernist painting's precepts of color, shadow, line, shape, and contour. With its solid cohesion of shapes, subject, and color, Cumming's art now bears comparison to Bonnard and Vuillard rather than Tobey or Callahan. Self-taught and yet a brilliant instructor, Cumming was a slim young man who talked like Mark Twain and drew like a dream. This book takes advantage of exclusive access to letters the young artist wrote to his mentor, Margaret Bundy Callahan, during the mid-1940s, and includes much that Cumming left out of his 1984 memoir, Sketchbook. Because of his close association with the Big Four -- Tobey, Graves, Callahan, and Anderson -- of the Northwest School, Cumming's art has often been compared to theirs and not allowed to stand on its own, considerably different, basis. That Kangas acknowledges this independent stand is one of this engrossing book's chief strengths. Matthew Kangas is a corresponding editor for Art in America and contributes frequently to the Seattle Times and Sculpture. He is the author of a number of books, among them Epicenter: Essays on North American Art, William Ingham: Configuration of Forces, and Robert Willson: Image-Maker. A signed, boxed, limited edition, including a print signed by the artist, is also available. To view the print, visit: http: //www.washington.edu/uwpress/books/cumming.html

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William Cumming (b. 1917) is one of the most complex and contradictory American artists of the past century. Painter, correspondent, art and music critic, educator, memoirist, and loquacious interview subject, Cumming is heard here in his own words and through art critic Matthew Kangas, who brings together 140 crucial works and situates Cumming in the cultural context of his times - artistic, social, and political, including his years in the Communist Party USA. Unaffected by decades of rapid stylistic changes in the art world, Cumming remained committed to the image of consequence -- socially relevant subject matter -- through the Great Depression, the "lost years" of World War II, and the Cold War. He then embraced a renewed sense of life, hope, and a second "conversion" to modernist painting's precepts of color, shadow, line, shape, and contour. With its solid cohesion of shapes, subject, and color, Cumming's art now bears comparison to Bonnard and Vuillard rather than Tobey or Callahan. Self-taught and yet a brilliant instructor, Cumming was a slim young man who talked like Mark Twain and drew like a dream. This book takes advantage of exclusive access to letters the young artist wrote to his mentor, Margaret Bundy Callahan, during the mid-1940s, and includes much that Cumming left out of his 1984 memoir, Sketchbook. Because of his close association with the Big Four -- Tobey, Graves, Callahan, and Anderson -- of the Northwest School, Cumming's art has often been compared to theirs and not allowed to stand on its own, considerably different, basis. That Kangas acknowledges this independent stand is one of this engrossing book's chief strengths. Matthew Kangas is a corresponding editor for Art in America and contributes frequently to the Seattle Times and Sculpture. He is the author of a number of books, among them Epicenter: Essays on North American Art, William Ingham: Configuration of Forces, and Robert Willson: Image-Maker. A signed, boxed, limited edition, including a print signed by the artist, is also available. To view the print, visit: http: //www.washington.edu/uwpress/books/cumming.html

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Product Details

General

Imprint

University of Washington Press

Country of origin

United States

Release date

August 2005

Availability

Supplier out of stock. If you add this item to your wish list we will let you know when it becomes available.

Authors

Dimensions

229 x 29mm (W x H)

Format

Hardcover - Sewn / Cloth over boards

Pages

159

Edition

Deluxe ed.

ISBN-13

978-0-295-98554-1

Barcode

9780295985541

Categories

LSN

0-295-98554-2



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