Swope Art Museum text image.






    Swope Book Review: Fifty Favorite
    Furnishings by Frank Lloyd Wright


September 22, 2010
Noon to 12:15 p.m.

Join Executive Director, Brian Lee Whisenhunt, for a lunch discussion of the book Fifty Favorite Furnishings by Frank Lloyd Wright, by Diane Maddex.

Participants will meet in the second floor Lobby Gallery at the Swope for a brief review, then the discussion will continue over lunch at one of Downtown Terre Haute's excellent restaurants. Dutch treat, no reservations!

Review From Publishers Weekly:

This sweeping biography, 10 years in the making, chronicles in fastidious detail de Kooning's rise from his humble beginnings in Rotterdam to his fame as an abstract expressionist and his descent into alcoholism and Alzheimer's. Emigrating to New York in 1926, de Kooning (1904–1997) situated himself among fellow artists and role models like Arshile Gorky. In 1938, he met and later married painter Elaine Fried; the two remained married despite de Kooning's predilection for bed hopping. (An affair with Joan Ward resulted in a daughter, Lisa, and indeed, the authors spend more ink on de Kooning's womanizing than his art making.) In the early 1940s, de Kooning's work appeared in group shows; his first solo show was a commercial failure. The artist did not meet with real success until the 1950s, when his paintings Excavation and Woman 1 made him "first among equals" in the art world. Stevens, New York magazine's art critic, and Swan, a former senior arts editor at Newsweek, see in de Kooning's life the realization of classic stories—the triumph of the immigrant, the man consumed by his success, the nonexistence of life's second acts—and this comprehensive biography, which attempts to explain de Kooning's art through a careful catalogue of his personal life, is a must read for his admirers.
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Cover image of de Kooning: An American Master

de Kooning:
An American Master

by Mark Stevens and Annalyn Swan




Detail image of Robert Motherwell's painting Caprice #4.

Robert Motherwell
Caprice #4, 1962
oil on canvas
1997.06
(detail)