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Title: The Body of Raphaelle Peale: Still Life and Selfhood, 1812-1824 (Ahmanson Murphy Fine Arts Imprint)
ISBN: 0520224981
Author:
Alexander Nemerov
Publicate Date: 2001-03-12 Publish: 2001-03-12
List Price: $50.00
Average Customer Rating: 3.5
Format: Hardcover
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Amazon Lowest New Price: $32.00
Amazon Lowest Used Price: $16.50
Amazon Merchant Price: $50.00
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| Customer Review: |
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1: NO PICTURES in an art book?
How can an artist purchase a book with NO PICTURES TO see what I'm buying!! What the heck
is that about? Didn't purchase for a few reasons, 1 . one reviewer also disappointed no pics. 2. Want to SEE
what I'm buying ... also 3. I'm an artist, don't need to be any more depressed by the author's psychological view
point! Sounded too depressing!
Seldom look any further at a book if I can't search inside and see color photos ... lots!
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2: The reviews stopped me from buying the book...
I don't even know what the book looks like.
I was interested in the paintings.
Now that i have read the reviews, I have no compulsion
to support another angst-ridden author looking
for a way of putting his ideas of life
on a defenseless painter of the 19th century.
Transparent, mirror-image writing by an insecure
writer helps none of us that are not like-minded.
So...the reviews were helpful.
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3: Call me.
This book made me feel lonely and confused. Though a facile psychanalytical analysis is tempting (Oedipous action) I am more confortable divulging my own discomfort with anything that lacks absolute certainty and closure.
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4: Delightfully Written
Alexander Nemerov's prose in this book is as rich and layered as Raphaelle Peale's paintings. It's almost as if he creates a work of art to attempt to explain other works of art. His approach seems intensely personal. I had no idea that he is Howard Nemerov's son, but you can definately tell that he knows how to write. I loved the book. I don't know if I agree with what he says, especially since other still-life painters produced similar works who didn't necessarily have problems with their fathers...but it's lovely reading for any art lover, especially those who are into american still-life painting. I'd put Nemerov right up there with Robert Hughes and Sister Wendy.
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5: A good read
A fresh look at Peale and his inner soul. Very well written, if not altogether watertight research. A wonderful Christmas gift that makes art history as readable as a novel. I keep re-reading sections, and the more I do the more I like it. At first I hated it, but this book really grows on you. At least it grew on me. It's questionable as history (I'm a decorative art specialist, not an 'paintings' art historian per se) but maybe we need this sort of approach now and again to get the big picture re: this wonderful 'body' of evidence that has been left behind by Raphaelle Peale. Never has such a book made me so angry with its fluffyness, yet so facsinated and so involved me with the prose. Hard to put down. This sort of thing is just really captivating. My initial and admittedly agressively vile reaction notwistanding, this is something historians will be talking about for some time to come. Nemerov is indeed brilliant. I don't agree with him, or do I? I can't decide exactly if I do or not. I just started going to school for my masters degree in art history in new england and we had to read this for a class. It was argued over quite a bit.
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