"A deceptively brief volume offers profound meditations on art, the creative process and so much more.
Berger has long been difficult to categorize—philosopher? art critic?
essayist? novelist?—and his latest defies pigeon-holing even by the
standards of this British-born writer who has long lived in France.
Let's start with the title, which alludes to a long-rumored but
never-found sketchbook by the philosopher Spinoza, to whom Berger refers
affectionately as "Bento" (the nickname for Benedict) and whom he
excerpts liberally. In fact, dozens of passages from Spinoza's Ethics, accompanied
by drawings from Berger (perhaps channeling Spinoza) and others might
give this the appearance of an illustrated abridgement of that work. Yet
Spinoza is more of a springboard, as Berger delves deeply into the
processes of making and responding to art, of thinking and being, of
narrative and history, of the essence of humanity. Taking inspiration
from the possibility of a Spinoza sketchbook, the author "began to make
drawings prompted by something asking to be drawn." In the process, he
began to focus on what he drew and why he drew, connecting the creation
of art to everything from philosophy to politics to religion. Each of
the prose pieces—some as short as a paragraph, few longer than a couple
of pages—is self-contained, yet this volume isn't exactly a collection
of essays, for none are titled and all are thematically interconnected
as well. Whether he's extending an analogy that compares making a
drawing to riding a motorbike or discusses storytelling in a manner that
could apply just as well to drawing ("In following a story, we follow a
storyteller, or, more precisely, we follow the trajectory of a
storyteller's attention, what it notices and what it ignores..."), he
makes such interaction and interconnection seem central to the human
condition.
Berger's readers will see with fresh eyes." Kirkus.
Request Bento's Sketchbook from the catalog.
Arts!
A selection of our new and noteworthy materials on the Performing Arts as well as other Fine Arts
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