GERHARD
RICHTER PORTAITS
Painting Appearances
Paul Moorhouse
Hardbound,
9¾" x 13¼",
176
pages
100 color illustrations
2010, Yale University Press
By Paul Moorhouse
From the Publisher:
“Appearance, semblance is the theme of my
life.” This statement by Gerhard Richter (b. 1932) suggests
the importance of portraiture to his career. One of the greatest
artists working today, Richter has been intensively engaged with
portraiture since 1962. His portraits invite critical consideration
of both portraiture and painting; they include images of specific
people—whether sensational subjects of people in the media,
icons of the popular imagination, or close friends and relatives.
However, all are transformed when Richter puts them onto canvas,
for they often become anonymous in the process or become significant
simply for being included. Richter’s investigation into
how we understand what surrounds us is at the heart of all his
work.
In this large-scale book—ideal for Richter’s
portraits—Paul Moorhouse offers a major advance in the understanding
and appreciation of the renowned artist’s work. With keen
insight, Moorhouse studies the portraits in close detail, examining
the sophisticated ways in which Richter has challenged and extended
the genre of portraiture and revealing the startling range of
the artist’s source material.
Featuring never-before-published images, this
book clearly eclipses any previous publication on Richter’s
portraiture. |