One Hundred Details from the National Gallery

 
 
 
 
 
 
£14.99
 

Author

Kenneth Clark is widely remembered for his television programmes on art, especially Civilisation, and the many works of art criticism he wrote during his lifetime. Appointed at the age of 30, he was the youngest ever Director of the National Gallery, London, from 1934 to 1945, before becoming Slade Professor of Fine Art at Oxford and later Chairman of the Arts Council. He was made a life peer in 1969 and died in 1983.

Originally published in 1938 when Kenneth Clark was director of the National Gallery, London, this book presents Clark’s favourite details from paintings in the museum’s collection. Newly updated and handsomely illustrated, this landmark book juxtaposes pairs of details rarely viewed together – such as cupids from Velázquez’s Rokeby Venus and Correggio’s The School of Love – to illuminate fascinating analogies and contrasts between paintings and artists. Clark’s erudite but accessible responses to these works are broad in scope and approach, and range from a few lines to an entire history of the still life. Featuring all new color reproductions, One Hundred Details offers a unique and intimate look at these paintings through the discerning eye of a world-renowned art historian and director.

View spreads of this book (2 MB PDF)

‘Lord Clark’s… vast erudition is conveyed in an easy, conversational style that both informs us and makes us eager for more’, The Wall Street Journal

 
Product Information
Product Code:
1018530
author:
Kenneth Clark
colour illustrations:
200
format:
Hardback
ISBN:
978 1 85709 426 8
pages:
160
published:
1938 (2008 edn)
publisher:
National Gallery Company
Dimensions:
260 mm X 240 mm

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