Description

Book Synopsis
Charles Le Brun's drawing manual on human emotions has been used for centuries by artists and students as a model for depicting facial expressions. In David Schutter's work, Le Brun's manual is set to a different direction--a series of abstract drawings recalling vestiges of the human face animated by emotion. But Schutter's drawings are neither copies nor portraiture. Rather, they are reflections on how Lebrun's renderings were made. Collected here, Schutter's work recreates not the subject matter but the very values of Lebrun's drawings--light, gesture, scale, and handling of materials. The cross-hatching in the original was used to make classical tone and volume, in Schutter's hand the technique makes for unstable impressions of strained neck and deeply furrowed brow, or for drawing marks and scribbles unto themselves. As such, these drawings end up denying a neat closure--unlike their academic source material--and render unsettling states of mind that require repeated viewing. Acc

Table of Contents
The Escape / David Schutter

L LB dc 1–45 / David Schutter

Memory as Initiation: David Schutter’s Critique of Expression / Barry Schwabsky

Schutter’s Seeing Ways / Dieter Roelstraete

Selected Drawings from L’expression des passions / Charles Le Brun

The Escape From a SeventeenthCentury Drawing

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    A Hardback by David Schutter, Barry Schwabsky, Dieter Roelstraete

    20 in stock

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      Publisher: The University of Chicago Press
      Publication Date: 05/10/2021
      ISBN13: 9780226461199, 978-0226461199
      ISBN10: 022646119X
      Also in:
      History of art

      Description

      Book Synopsis
      Charles Le Brun's drawing manual on human emotions has been used for centuries by artists and students as a model for depicting facial expressions. In David Schutter's work, Le Brun's manual is set to a different direction--a series of abstract drawings recalling vestiges of the human face animated by emotion. But Schutter's drawings are neither copies nor portraiture. Rather, they are reflections on how Lebrun's renderings were made. Collected here, Schutter's work recreates not the subject matter but the very values of Lebrun's drawings--light, gesture, scale, and handling of materials. The cross-hatching in the original was used to make classical tone and volume, in Schutter's hand the technique makes for unstable impressions of strained neck and deeply furrowed brow, or for drawing marks and scribbles unto themselves. As such, these drawings end up denying a neat closure--unlike their academic source material--and render unsettling states of mind that require repeated viewing. Acc

      Table of Contents
      The Escape / David Schutter

      L LB dc 1–45 / David Schutter

      Memory as Initiation: David Schutter’s Critique of Expression / Barry Schwabsky

      Schutter’s Seeing Ways / Dieter Roelstraete

      Selected Drawings from L’expression des passions / Charles Le Brun

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