Archive for September, 2011

San Diego’s Craft Revolution
From Post-War Modern to California Design

Monday, September 12th, 2011

San Diego's Craft RevolutionSan Diego’s Craft Revolution – From Post-War Modern to California Design reveals the important contribution of San Diego craftsmen to the post-war Southern California art scene. From the postwar period beginning in the 1940s up through the 1970s, San Diego’s Craft Revolution explores the progression from sleek modernism to unconventional handmade objects of use such as furniture, doors, jewelry and ceramics. Over 60 artists are featured in the book, including Toza and Ruth Radakovich, Rhoda Lopez, Jack Hopkins, Arline Fisch, Martha Longenecker, Ellamarie and Jackson Woolley, Larry Hunter, Kay Whitcomb and James Hubbell. Many of these San Diego-based artists received national attention and participated in major Los Angeles exhibitions, including the California Design series held in Pasadena and Los Angeles.

  • ISBN – 978-0-914155-29-4
  • published by the Mingei International Museum
  • text by Dave Hampton
  • format: hard cover
  • dimensions: 9.5″ x 9.5″
  • 178 page plus cover / 200+ color plates
  • publication year: 2011
  • hard cover: out of print
  • hard cover order number: FAP-124 H

 

Ursula O’Farrell – Emotion in Motion

Monday, September 12th, 2011

Emotion in MotionBack in the 1950s a group of painters in the San Francisco Bay Area established what came to be known as Bay Area Figurative Painting. Originally David Park, Elmer Bischoff and Richard Diebenkorn, painters who had all done abstract pictures, decided to embark on figuration which was indebted to abstract gesture painting, but looked again at the world of appearances for their subjects. They even painted from the life model which simply was not done by the Abstract Expressionists. A second generation, Joan Brown, Manuel Neri, Bruce McGaw and others made this new approach to painting (or sculpting) the human figure, into their own and endowed it with a new spirit. Ursula O’Farrell can be said to represent a third generation which includes Christopher Brown and Roger Hermann.

O’Farrell has focused her painting almost entirely on the depiction of women, reflecting no doubt a concern about her own identity. These canvases are done by an artist who has absorbed the lessons of Action Painting and are done with a vigorous brush, probably also with a palette knife and a trowel with lush paint slathered on to the support. Some may seem unrestrained at first look, but they follow their own order—as a 17th Century Chinese landscape painter once said: “The brush is for saving the world from chaos.” Her women, lost in thought, seated, lying, waiting, praying, dancing are all self-absorbed. Above all, they are her reasons for painting.

  • soft cover ISBN – 978-0-9819933-5-5
    published by Fine Arts Press
    text by Peter Selz, Mark Van Proyen, and Maureen Davidson
    format: soft cover only
    dimensions: 11″ x 11″
    104 page plus cover / 50 color plates
    publications year: 2011
    order number: FAP-123 S
  • out of print