Bibliographic Information

Bill Jacklin

John Russell Taylor

Phaidon, 1997

Available at  / 2 libraries

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Includes index

Description and Table of Contents

Description

Bill Jacklin (b.1943) is one of the most exciting and individual artists of the generation that first came to prominence in the 1960s. From the start, he seemed destined to swim against the stream. In an era of Pop Art he chose to be an abstract artist, producing intricate patterns of grids and dots. When he had achieved success in this style, he returned to a revolutionary type of realistic representation. He was - and still is - an obsessed and obsessive painter, driven by his own compulsion to pursue an untrodden path. This book provides the definitive mid-career survey of this British-American artist, as it deconstructs with thorough analytical depth the generation, progression and current state of Jacklin's artistic achievements; the significance of his oeuvre as a whole; and the underlying significance for his work of his personal outlook on life. This is a beautiful edition in itself, displaying innovative design, strong visual impact and a delicate yet distinctive aestheticism - which altogether substantiate the artistic sensitivity of Jacklin himself.

Table of Contents

  • Introducing Bill Jacklin
  • the young Jacklin
  • the early career 1967-1985
  • Manhattan
  • the 1990s
  • themes and structures
  • time, space and the serial image
  • list of exhibitions.

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