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John Edwin Canaday (1907–1985)

Autor de Mainstreams of Modern Art

62+ Obras 2,556 Miembros 23 Reseñas

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Obras de John Edwin Canaday

Mainstreams of Modern Art (1959) 284 copias
Expressionism (1958) 122 copias
Realism (1958) 121 copias
What Is A Painting? (1958) 118 copias
Abstraction (1958) 108 copias
Composition As Pattern (1958) 105 copias
Composition As Expression (1958) 102 copias
Fresco (1958) 98 copias
The Artist As A Visionary (1958) 92 copias
Composition As Structure (1958) 91 copias
Tempera And Oil (1958) 89 copias
The lives of the painters (1969) 77 copias
The Devil in the Bush (1945) 53 copias
Glory And Grandeur (1958) 47 copias
The Cabinda Affair (1949) 44 copias
The Congo Venus (1950) 42 copias
Earth, Heaven, And Hell (1959) 36 copias
Murder at the Flea Club (1957) 35 copias
Keys to art (1964) 34 copias
Venus Revisited (1959) 31 copias
The World Rediscovered (1958) 28 copias
The World In Order (1958) 23 copias
Painting In Transition (1959) 22 copias
The World Triumphant (1959) 21 copias
The World Dividing (1959) 19 copias
Actaeon And The Atom (1959) 18 copias
Summer Idyl (1959) 18 copias
The Quick And The Dead (1959) 18 copias
The War Of Illusions (1959) 17 copias
The Smell of Money (1943) 17 copias
The Accomplice (1949) 10 copias
The Artful Avocado (1973) 6 copias
Techniques 2 copias
Another Man's Life (1953) 2 copias

Obras relacionadas

Smithsonian Collection of Newspaper Comics (1977) — Prólogo — 342 copias
Four and Twenty Bloodhounds (1950) — Contribuidor — 17 copias
Cream of the Crime (1962) — Contribuidor — 12 copias

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Conocimiento común

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Reseñas

Read this cover-to-cover like twenty years ago. Loved it.
 
Denunciada
GirlMeetsTractor | 3 reseñas más. | Mar 22, 2020 |
I enjoy reading conservative art critics, even if I don't agree with them. Hilton Kramer, Jed Perl, and Robert Hughes, to name three prominent ones, have served as a ballast against the faddishness of the art world, and wrote (and continue to write, in Perl's case) insightfully about what they believed. Alas, the late New York Times critic John Canaday doesn't hold a candle to them.

Canaday's limitations are very apparent, and while I might agree with some of his assessments about the lesser lights of Abstract Expressionism, it's clear that he never understood the movement; he never grasps that abstraction could be of more than just formal interest. Instead, Canaday needed to see the subject represented, so where he knocks Mark Rothko or Franz Kline, he holds up histrionic "image of man" artists such as Antonio Saura, James Kearns, and Leonard Baskin, none of whom have dated well.

To add insult to injury, his hamfisted attempts at humor (including not one but two articles about fictional artists he thinks represent the folly of the era) in comparison make Garrison Keillor sound like an edgy alternative comic.
… (más)
 
Denunciada
giovannigf | Feb 27, 2018 |
Slight on "detecting" in the conventional sense; the narrator relays information to Dr Mary Finney and she draws conclusions which she mostly keeps to herself until the time is ripe for a plot twisting revelation or surprise move. But the setting is exotic and taken from author Canaday's wartime experience, the characters are fully drawn, and the eye of the art critic is always in evidence. A psychological study for which a crime is a pretext, but still a satisfying read for mystery connoisseurs.… (más)
 
Denunciada
booksaplenty1949 | 2 reseñas más. | Dec 29, 2017 |
Second in the series about medical missionary detective Mary Finney and Hoop Taliaferro, in this one a minor US government bureaucrat working for the (Head's note says) imaginary War Claims Settlement Commission --basically paying off U.S,. government purchase left over from World War 2. As in Murder at the Flea Club (rereading which led me to buy this) much of the first part of the story is Hoop just telling Mary the circumstances leading up to a murder. In this case, he has gone to the (real, but according to Head's note slightly adjusted for the story) tiny Portuguese enclave of Cabinda (next to then Belgian Congo) to pay an incredibly high price ($4 million when that really was $4 million) for a load of mahogany which was going to be made into a projected airplane that got scrapped.. On the way, he meets a dubious English expat type named Pete Biggs who shows up murdered in Cabinda.… (más)
 
Denunciada
antiquary | 2 reseñas más. | Jun 18, 2015 |

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Obras
62
También por
3
Miembros
2,556
Popularidad
#10,046
Valoración
4.1
Reseñas
23
ISBNs
69
Idiomas
2

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