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Architect and artist Van Doren offers a love letter to Venice in this
elegant and slender volume, and he sings his praise to the city through
majestic prose and 23 beautiful watercolor paintings of Venice. He
quickly discovers, after wandering into San Giacomo di Rialto, perhaps
Venice's oldest church, that the city has one "great transformative
advantage: Mediterranean light," which offers a new way of seeing the
city's architecture, the history of art, and his own painting. Van
Doren praises numerous artists from whom he draws lessons as he explores
the city. James Whistler captures the "sweet serenity with perfect
pitch." He admires deeply John Singer Sargent's watercolors of
Venice that exhibit his "supreme confidence with color." Van Doren takes
John Ruskin as his model, confessing that Ruskin was an "artist of
architecture" whose writings convinced him that he could become a
painter. In all of his paintings, he has attempts to keep in mind the
lesson of one of his teachers: "Keep it simple. Don't try to make
it more complicated than it already is." Clearly, he's learned his
lesson well. Illus. (Jan.) Copyright 2013 Publishers Weekly.
Arts!
A selection of our new and noteworthy materials on the Performing Arts as well as other Fine Arts
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