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61. Bad Heart: Fotographies i Pintures
 
$550.00
62. Abstract Reality
 
63. Parkett #18
 
64. Easy Rider
 
$1,000.00
65. Out of the 60's
 
$29.29
66. VIGGO MORTENSEN: RECENT FORGERIES
$181.00
67. Achieving Business Excellence,
 
68. James Dean : Behind the Scenes
 
69. Easy Ridder
70. Frank: International Journal of
71. ED RUSCHA: EARLY PAINTINGS
72. Bruce Conner: Assemblages / Paintings
$1.95
73. Vanity Fair August 2010 Angelina
74. Blue Velvet [VHS Video]
 
75. Vanity Fair April 1987 Dennis
76. Black & White Magazine June
77. Vanity Fair Magazine, April 1987,
$19.99
78. People From Dodge City, Kansas:
 
79. Andy Warhol
 
80. Bo Bartlett Paintings and Drawings

61. Bad Heart: Fotographies i Pintures 1961-1993
by Dennis Hopper
 Paperback: Pages (1993)

Isbn: 848804206X
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Editorial Review

Product Description
Approx 100 pages. 14 1/8 x 9 5/8 Inches. Softcover exhibition catalogue in Spanish with many photos and lists of Hopper works. ... Read more


62. Abstract Reality
by Dennis Hopper
 Hardcover: Pages (1998-01-01)
-- used & new: US$550.00
(price subject to change: see help)
Asin: B001VZV64W
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63. Parkett #18
by Edward, Hopper, Dennis et al Ruscha
 Paperback: Pages (1988)

Asin: B000V6GP34
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64. Easy Rider
by Peter; Hopper, Dennis; Southern, Terry Fonda
 Mass Market Paperback: Pages (1969)

Asin: B000NZW89S
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65. Out of the 60's
by Dennis Hopper
 Hardcover: Pages (1986-09)
list price: US$45.00 -- used & new: US$1,000.00
(price subject to change: see help)
Asin: 9998082528
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66. VIGGO MORTENSEN: RECENT FORGERIES
by VIGGO). Mortensen, Viggo. Introduction by Dennis Hopper (MORTENSEN
 Paperback: Pages (2004)
-- used & new: US$29.29
(price subject to change: see help)
Asin: B0027BCCB0
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67. Achieving Business Excellence, Quality and Performance Improvement (Thorogood Reports)
by Colin Chapman, Dennis Hopper
Spiral-bound: 91 Pages (1997-10)
list price: US$185.00 -- used & new: US$181.00
(price subject to change: see help)
Asin: 1854180185
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Editorial Review

Product Description
This valuable Report identifies all the areas critical to developing an effective performance improvement process. It is a practical guide to the use of business excellence models and frameworks, quality standards, benchmarking tools, self-assessment programs and the latest performance improvement initiatives.
... Read more


68. James Dean : Behind the Scenes
by Leith; Burns, Keith re: James Dean with introduction by Dennis Hopper Adams
 Hardcover: Pages (1996)

Asin: B0042U4SU2
Average Customer Review: 4.0 out of 5 stars
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Customer Reviews (1)

4-0 out of 5 stars Great insight into Deans movie career
This is an outstanding book for both avid James Dean fans as well as classic movie buffs. It gives a lot of insight into this enigmatic man who has continued to inspire people and influence movie making, even long after his death. My only disapointment was the fact that the book only shows his three "big" movies; East of Eden, Giant and Rebel Without a Cause. It would have been nice if the authors had included some of his television work and the other movies where he didn't have a lead role. Nonetheless, the book is well worth the price and I highly recommend it. ... Read more


69. Easy Ridder
by Peter, Dennis Hopper And Terry Southern (Screenplay); Nancy Hardin And Marilyn Schlossberg (Eds). Fonda
 Paperback: Pages (1969-01-01)

Asin: B003SJPEE2
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70. Frank: International Journal of Contemporary Writing & Art (Nos. 8/9 Winter 1987/1988)
by Dennis Hopper, Gary Eisenberg, A.I. Bezzerides, Katherine P. Smith, John Sanford, Maria Hernandez, Carol Tinker, Edward Ruscha, Hubert Selby, Mark Mothersbaugh
Journal: Pages (1987)

Asin: B0047K1TS6
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71. ED RUSCHA: EARLY PAINTINGS
by EDWARD). Hopper, Dennis & Jeffrey Deitch (RUSCHA
Hardcover: 36 Pages (1988)

Asin: B000PIDLA8
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72. Bruce Conner: Assemblages / Paintings / Drawings / Engraving Collages / 1960-1990
by Bruce Conner, Robert Dean, Dennis Hopper
Paperback: Pages (1990)

Asin: B000ORGDK0
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73. Vanity Fair August 2010 Angelina Jolie Farewell Angelina? Dennis Hopper
by Various
Unknown Binding: Pages (2010-08-01)
-- used & new: US$1.95
(price subject to change: see help)
Asin: B003UPRA4Q
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74. Blue Velvet [VHS Video]
by David Lynch
VHS Tape: Pages (2000)

Isbn: 6305214824
Average Customer Review: 4.0 out of 5 stars
Canada | United Kingdom | Germany | France | Japan
Editorial Review

Product Description
VHS VIDEO! Blue Velvet! David Lynch peeks behind the picket fences of small-town America to reveal a corrupt shadow world of malevolence, sadism, and madness. From the opening shots Lynch turns the Technicolor picture postcard images of middle class homes and tree-lined lanes into a dreamy vision on the edge of nightmare. After his father collapses in a preternaturally eerie sequence, college boy Kyle MacLachlan returns home and stumbles across a severed human ear in a vacant lot. With the help of sweetly innocent high school girl (Laura Dern), he turns junior detective and uncovers a frightening yet darkly compelling world of voyeurism and sex. Drawn deeper into the brutal world of drug dealer and blackmailer Frank, played with raving mania by an obscenity-shouting Dennis Hopper in a career-reviving performance, he loses his innocence and his moral bearings when confronted with pure, unexplainable evil. Isabella Rossellini is terrifyingly desperate as Hopper's sexual slave who becomes MacLachlan's illicit lover, and Dean Stockwell purrs through his role as Hopper's oh-so-suave buddy. Lynch strips his surreally mundane sets to a ghostly austerity, which composer Angelo Badalamenti encourages with the smooth, spooky strains of a lush score. Blue Velvet is a disturbing film that delves into the darkest reaches of psycho-sexual brutality and simply isn't for everyone. But for a viewer who wants to see the cinematic world rocked off its foundations, David Lynch delivers a nightmarish masterpiece. --Sean AxmakerAmazon.com
David Lynch peeks behind the picket fences of small-town America to reveal a corrupt shadow world of malevolence, sadism, and madness. From the opening shots Lynch turns the Technicolor picture postcard images of middle class homes and tree-lined lanes into a dreamy vision on the edge of nightmare. After his father collapses in a preternaturally eerie sequence, college boy Kyle MacLachlan returns home and stumbles across a severed human ear in a vacant lot. With the help of sweetly innocent high school girl (Laura Dern), he turns junior detective and uncovers a frightening yet darkly compelling world of voyeurism and sex. Drawn deeper into the brutal world of drug dealer and blackmailer Frank, played with raving mania by an obscenity-shouting Dennis Hopper in a career-reviving performance, he loses his innocence and his moral bearings when confronted with pure, unexplainable evil. Isabella Rossellini is terrifyingly desperate as Hopper's sexual slave who becomes MacLachlan's illicit lover, and Dean Stockwell purrs through his role as Hopper's oh-so-suave buddy. Lynch strips his surreally mundane sets to a ghostly austerity, which composer Angelo Badalamenti encourages with the smooth, spooky strains of a lush score. Blue Velvet is a disturbing film that delves into the darkest reaches of psycho-sexual brutality and simply isn't for everyone. But for a viewer who wants to see the cinematic world rocked off its foundations, David Lynch delivers a nightmarish masterpiece. --Sean Axmaker ... Read more

Customer Reviews (272)

3-0 out of 5 stars 1986
I thought this dark drama by David Lynch was worth renting...once. It has a dark humor to it. Star studded cast.

5-0 out of 5 stars Strange but great film
The film opens with artful visuals of a white picket fence, red roses planted beside the fence, and a clear blue sky.Red, white and blue--the symbols of a quiet, small, middle class town in America.A fire truck with a dalmation dog standing on its side slowly passes by.The town's name is Lumberton.Its state is not mentioned.This can be any place in America.But lurking in small town America, hidden in some grass, is someone's severed ear, being brutally attacked by insects.

The ear is discovered by college student Jeffrey Beaumont, well played by Kyle MacLachlin.Jeffrey is home from college because his father has suffered a stroke and been hospitalized.Up to this point, Jeffrey has been the product of small town Lumberton.He is naive and very inexperienced in the evil side of life.So is the young and pretty "teen angel," Sandy, as played by Laura Dern.Sandy is the daughter of the town's chief police detective.They meet, fall in love, and become involved in the investigation of the crime of the severed ear.

Jeffrey learns that the ear belongs to the husband of lounge singer, Dorothy Vallens, who together with their little son, have been abducted by an evil, psychopathic maniac, with the name of Frank Booth.Dennis Hopper gives an extremely frightening, over-the-top performance as Frank Booth.He is the ultimate villain of such hatefulness and repulsiveness, that one cannot stand to look at him.Ironically enough, Frank Booth clearly sends out signals of vile hatred whenever anyone should look at him.Dorothy is played by Isabella Rosselini, a beautiful, mysterious, and seemingly very masochistic femme fatale. Jeffrey has never experienced anyone like Dorothy and is instantly captivated. Dorothy also happens to be Frank Booth's sex-slave. Mesmerized by her, Jeffrey has become Dorothy's protector and lover.

"Blue Velvet" is a film of great magnetism and intensity.After the first few minutes of watching it, I was hooked.Together with its moments of extreme violence and sadism, as well as its brief moments of "comic relief" (particularly a couple of scenes with Dean Stockwell as Frank Booth's "suave" friend) "Blue Velvet," is one of my favorite all time films.At least in my opinion, it is also one of the truly great movies of the last third of the 20th century.

1-0 out of 5 stars "Blue Velvet" contains scenes of such raw emotional energy that it's easy to understand why some critics have hailed it as a
...masterpiece. A film this painful and wounding has to be given special consideration.

And yet those very scenes of stark sexual despair are the tipoff to what's wrong with the movie. They're so strong that they deserve to be in a movie that is sincere, honest and true. But "Blue Velvet" surrounds them with a story that's marred by sophomoric satire and cheap shots. The director is either denying the strength of his material or trying to defuse it by pretending it's all part of a campy in-joke.

The movie has two levels of reality. On one level, we're in Lumberton, a simple-minded small town where people talk in television cliches and seem to be clones of 1950s sitcom characters. On another level, we're told a story of sexual bondage, of how Isabella Rossellini's husband and son have been kidnapped by Dennis Hopper, who makes her his sexual slave. The twist is that the kidnapping taps into the woman's deepest feelings: She finds that she is a masochist who responds with great sexual passion to this situation.

Everyday town life is depicted with a deadpan irony; characters use lines with corny double meanings and solemnly recite platitudes.

Meanwhile, the darker story of sexual bondage is told absolutely on the level in cold-blooded realism.

The movie begins with a much praised sequence in which picket fences and flower beds establish a small-town idyll. Then a man collapses while watering the lawn, and a dog comes to drink from the hose that is still held in his unconscious grip. The great imagery continues as the camera burrows into the green lawn and finds hungry insects beneath - a metaphor for the surface and buried lives of the town.

The man's son, a college student (Kyle MacLachlan), comes home to visit his dad's bedside and resumes a romance with the daughter (Laura Dern) of the local police detective. MacLachlan finds a severed human ear in a field, and he and Dern get involved in trying to solve the mystery of the ear. The trail leads to a nightclub singer (Rossellini) who lives alone in a starkly furnished flat.

In a sequence that Hitchcock would have been proud of, MacLachlan hides himself in Rossellini's closet and watches, shocked, as she has a sadomashochistic sexual encounter with Hopper, a drug-sniffing pervert.

Hopper leaves. Rossellini discovers MacLachlan in the closet and, to his astonishment, pulls a knife on him and forces him to submit to her seduction. He is appalled but fascinated; she wants him to be a "bad boy" and hit her.

These sequences have great power. They make "9 1/2 Weeks" look rather timid by comparison, because they do seem genuinely born from the darkest and most despairing side of human nature. If "Blue Velvet" had continued to develop its story in a straight line, if it had followed more deeply into the implications of the first shocking encounter between Rossellini and MacLachlan, it might have made some real emotional discoveries.

Instead, director David Lynch chose to interrupt the almost hypnotic pull of that relationship in order to pull back to his jokey, small-town satire. Is he afraid that movie audiences might not be ready for stark S & M unless they're assured it's all really a joke? I was absorbed and convinced by the relationship between Rossellini and MacLachlan, and annoyed because the director kept placing himself between me and the material. After five or 10 minutes in which the screen reality was overwhelming, I didn't need the director prancing on with a top hat and cane, whistling that it was all in fun.

Indeed, the movie is pulled so violently in opposite directions that it pulls itself apart. If the sexual scenes are real, then why do we need the sendup of the "Donna Reed Show"? What are we being told? That beneath the surface of Small Town, U.S.A., passions run dark and dangerous? Don't stop the presses.

The sexual material in "Blue Velvet" is so disturbing, and the performance by Rosellini is so convincing and courageous, that it demands a movie that deserves it. American movies have been using satire for years to take the edge off sex and violence. Occasionally, perhaps sex and violence should be treated with the seriousness they deserve. Given the power of the darker scenes in this movie, we're all the more frustrated that the director is unwilling to follow through to the consequences of his insights.

"Blue Velvet" is like the guy who drives you nuts by hinting at horrifying news and then saying, "Never mind." There's another thing. Rossellini is asked to do things in this film that require real nerve. In one scene, she's publicly embarrassed by being dumped naked on the lawn of the police detective. In others, she is asked to portray emotions that I imagine most actresses would rather not touch. She is degraded, slapped around, humiliated and undressed in front of the camera. And when you ask an actress to endure those experiences, you should keep your side of the bargain by putting her in an important film.

That's what Bernardo Bertolucci delivered when he put Marlon Brando and Maria Schneider through the ordeal of "Last Tango in Paris." In "Blue Velvet," Rossellini goes the whole distance, but Lynch distances himself from her ordeal with his clever asides and witty little in-jokes. In a way, his behavior is more sadistic than the Hopper character.

What's worse? Slapping somebody around, or standing back and finding the whole thing funny?

4-0 out of 5 stars Still Powerful Film-making
I had first seen Blue Velvet in the theater when it first came out. I was confused, disturbed and, yet, inexplicably mesmerized by it. There was nothing around like it. Nowadays, film-makers try to challenge us with "innovative" cuts, digital manipulation, gratuitous sex and over-the-top characterizations.

What makes Blue Velvet still worth viewing (for those who can stomach it) is its very "conventional" film technique and character/plot development which still manages to produce a disturbing and inexplicably mesmerizing experience. I'm less confused now but much more appreciative of David Lynch's film-making. It's all pretty tightly done. Once you get through Dennis Hopper's unforgettable portrayal of a Frank Booth -- realistic and demonic -- you'll wonder why he does those bland commercials now.

4-0 out of 5 stars Lynch's best film
I'm not exactly a David Lynch fan as such; I think some of his films are too self-consciously "difficult" for their own good. But 'Blue Velvet' is definitely a personal favourite. Perhaps it's because this is one of Lynch's more straightforward works; its narrative is linear, and no characters change into a different person or become possessed by a demon halfway through the film. Of course, "straightforward" for David Lynch is still very dark and twisted. 'Blue Velvet' is an unsettling and often surreal film that explores the typical Lynch theme of a dark underworld lurking beneath a seemingly ideal community.

Even if you don't like his films, you must concede that Lynch always gets strong and interesting performances out of his actors. Kyle MacLachlan and Laura Dern are perfect as the wholesome all-American young couple, with MacLachlan's Beaumont equally believable as the naive innocent at the beginning of the film and the more morally ambiguous character he becomes. Isabella Rossellini is surprisingly effective as the battered victim-yet-femme-fatale Dorothy, while Dean Stockwell's memorable cameo as Ben almost steals the show. The real star, of course, is Dennis Hopper, who gives an intensely disturbing performance as the obscene gas-inhaling psychopath Frank Booth. Frank is terrifying because he's completely amoral; he is capable of literally anything and in Lynch's hands you never know what the next "anything" will be. The surreal tone of the film adds to the unease by giving several scenes (especially involving Frank) a very unreal, other-worldly quality. The term "nightmarish" is over-used, but the combination of the violent and the bizzare really does make 'Blue Velvet' feel like a nightmare, or perhaps a very twisted S&M fantasy.

As with many Lynch films, 'Blue Velvet' is difficult to categorise. It has elements of mystery, drama, film noir, and even black comedy (there's some surprisingly effective dark humour here, despite the intensity). Although not as difficult as some of his later films such as 'Lost Highway', this is still a very confronting and challenging piece of work, and is certainly not for everybody. But if Lynch's twisted all-American vision sounds like your thing, 'Blue Velvet' is probably the best place to start before tackling some of his even more experimental films. ... Read more


75. Vanity Fair April 1987 Dennis Hopper Cover
by Tina (ed.) Brown
 Paperback: Pages (1987-01-01)

Asin: B001V74OE4
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76. Black & White Magazine June 2007 (Dennis Hopper, Issue 51)
by various
Paperback: Pages (2007)

Asin: B001NQ6OC8
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Editorial Review

Product Description
B&W magazine back issue, number 51, June 2007 features Dennis Hopper Interview as cover story. 128 pages of color-free fine b/w photos and articles. ... Read more


77. Vanity Fair Magazine, April 1987, Dennis Hopper cover
Paperback: Pages (1987)

Asin: B001CERLYG
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Editorial Review

Product Description
dennis hopper ... Read more


78. People From Dodge City, Kansas: Dennis Hopper, John E. Gingrich, David Laurin Ricken, David A. R. White, Tyce Bune, Billy Al Bengston
Paperback: 58 Pages (2010-09-15)
list price: US$19.99 -- used & new: US$19.99
(price subject to change: see help)
Asin: 1155879899
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Editorial Review

Product Description
Chapters: Dennis Hopper, John E. Gingrich, David Laurin Ricken, David A. R. White, Tyce Bune, Billy Al Bengston, Chris Estes, Fred Hall, Robert Delpino, Richard Ames Hart. Source: Wikipedia. Pages: 56. Not illustrated. Free updates online. Purchase includes a free trial membership in the publisher's book club where you can select from more than a million books without charge. Excerpt: Admiral John Edward Gingrich (February 23, 1897May 26, 1960) was an officer in the United States Navy who served as the first chief of security for the United States Atomic Energy Commission from 1947 to 1949, and as Chief of Naval Material from 1953 to 1954. He retired from the Navy as a four-star admiral. Born in Dodge City, Kansas, to Edward Grant Gingrich and the former Bertha Allen, he attended the University of Kansas before receiving an appointment to the United States Naval Academy at Annapolis, Maryland, in 1915. He graduated from the Naval Academy on June 7, 1919, and was commissioned an ensign in the United States Navy. His first assignment was aboard the battleship Pennsylvania, flagship of the Atlantic Fleet. From January 1920 to July 1921 he served as assistant communication officer on the staff of Admiral Henry B. Wilson, Jr., Commander in Chief, Atlantic Fleet. In August 1921 he was transferred from Pennsylvania to the newly commissioned battleship Maryland, where he remained until June 1925, when he returned to the Naval Academy for a two-year tour as an instructor in the Department of Navigation. From May 1927 to July 1930 he served as gunnery officer aboard the armored cruiser Rochester, which operated in the Caribbean Sea during interventions in Nicaragua and Haiti. He spent the next two years with the Naval Reserve Officer Training Corps Unit at Northwestern University in Evanston, Illinois. He commanded the fleet tug Algorma from June 1932 until April 1934, then served aboard the heavy cruiser Indianapolis until June 193...More: http://booksllc.net/?id=19355188 ... Read more


79. Andy Warhol
by Andy Warhol, Gerard Malanga, Walter Hopps, Dennis Hopper
 Paperback: 51 Pages (1899-12-30)
list price: US$35.00
Isbn: 189147507X
Average Customer Review: 5.0 out of 5 stars
Canada | United Kingdom | Germany | France | Japan
Editorial Review

Product Description
Andy Warhol (1928-1987), one of the most celebrated artists of the last third of the twentieth century, owes his unique place in the history of visual culture not to the mastery of a single medium but to the exercise of multiple media and roles. A legendary art world figure, he worked as an artist, filmmaker, photographer, collector, author, and designer. Beginning in the 1950s as a commercial artist, he went on to produce work for exhibition in galleries and museums. The range of his efforts soon expanded to the making of films, photography, video, and books. Warhol first came to public notice in the 1960s through works that drew on advertising, brand names, and newspaper stories and headlines. Many of his best-known images, both single and in series, were produced within the context of pop art. Warhol was a major figure in the bridging of the gap between high and low art, and his mode of production in the famous studio known as "The Factory" involved the recognition of art making as one form of enterprise among others. The radical nature of that enterprise has ensured the iconic status of his art and person.Andy Warhol contains illustrated essays by Benjamin H. D. Buchloh, Thomas Crow, Hal Foster, Rosalind Krauss, Annette Michelson, and Nan Rosenthal, plus a previously unpublished interview with Warhol by Buchloh. The essays address Warhol’s relation to and effect on mass culture and the recurrence of disaster and death in his art.Amazon.com Review
"There will always be a pre- and a post-Warhol," writesPhilippe Tretiack, "and that post-Warhol period is having difficultyestablishing itself." There also will always be people who considerAndy Warhol's work to represent the beginning of the end of seriouscultural life in America. A flagrantly commercial antihero of thegay, big-city subculture, Warhol offended in so many ways. Hischeerful, absurdist pop images of Campbell's soup cans, JackieKennedy, Marilyn Monroe, and the electric chair made serious subjectmatter with serious meaning a thing of the past. Everything Warhol didmade serious film, painting, drawing, or printmaking look slightlysilly. He flaunted his disregard for the pretensions of the fineartist, calling his studio "the Factory," churning out multiples, andpublicly insisting that his work could be fabricated by practicallyanyone (until it was pointed out to him that this would significantlylower his prices).

In an excellent essay in the front of thissmall book, Tretiack places Warhol historically and esthetically,hitting all the high points of Warhol's flamboyant career andstylishly discussing the legacy of this '60s bad boy. The rest of thebook is full of pictures--mostly Warhol's more famous images, but alsosome snapshots of Andy. Missing are a few pictures of Warhol'sgraceful, elegant shoe drawings and recipe illustrations, showing thekind of fine-art facility with which the artist began his career. Butthe rest is packed in here in all its flashy vainglory, including thegreen-tinged picture of a smiling Tricky Dick Nixon with thehand-lettered admonishment "Vote McGovern." At the end of the book area brief chronology and a list of captions for the plates.--PeggyMoorman ... Read more

Customer Reviews (1)

5-0 out of 5 stars The breadth of Warhol's paintings
You can get a excellent sense of Warhol's progress from this book. 1962 seems to have been a decisive years. Before 1962, one can see Warhol's transition from commercial artist and early experimentalism. Beginning sometime in 1962, one sees the emergence of the well-chosen, well-executed images that Warhol is known for.

It seems helpful in understanding his growth to see some of Warhol's less appealing works. Nonetheless, with a total of about 320 pages of images, there are still plenty of Warhol's bettter works to see here.

Four high-quality, significant essays about Warhol open this book. The closing includes a chronology, a "collective portrait" consisting of short contributions from many who knew Warhol well, and "Warhol in his own words", selections that reveal how insightful yet straight-forward Warhol could be.

This seems to be the single best bible of Warhol's paintings. There is a comprehensive collection of Warhol's prints available in "Andy Warhol Prints: A Catalogue Raisonne: 1962-1987" which seems prettier but may suffer from excessive prettiness. Warhol's trashier aspects are not apparent, nor is his experimental reach, in the prints. Both books have their appeal, but as a one source collection of Warhol's painting and critical assessments of it this Retrospective seems unparalleled.

For a good exposure to Warhol in all his diversity, "Andy Warhol: 365 Takes" by the staff of the Andy Warhol Museum is also valuable, but to focus on the paintings, this retrospective seems ideal. ... Read more


80. Bo Bartlett Paintings and Drawings Jan 5 - Jan 26 1991
by Intro Dennis; Sweet, Foreword Christopher Hopper
 Paperback: Pages (1991)

Asin: B003NIRN92
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