Somewhere in Europeāwe don't know whereāaround 1700. An artist is staring at something on the floor next to her worktable. It's just a log from the woodpile, stood on end. The soft, damp bark; the gently raised growth rings; the dark radial cracksānothing could be more ordinary. But as the artist looks, and looks, colors begin to appearāshapesāeven figures. She turns to a sheet of paper and begins to paint.
Today this anonymous artist's masterpiece is preserved in the University of Glasgow Library. It is a manuscript in a plain brown binding, whose entire contents, beyond a cryptic title page, are fifty-two small, round watercolor paintings based on the visions she saw in the ends of firewood logs.
This book reproduces the entire sequence of paintings in full color, together with a meditative commentary by the art historian James Elkins. Sometimes, he writes, we can glimpse the artist's sourcesāBaroque religious art, genre painting, mythology, alchemical manuscripts, emblem books, optical effects. But always she distorts her images, mixes them together, leaves them incompleteāalways she rejects familiar stories and clear-cut meanings. In this daring refusal to make sense, Elkins sees an uncannily modern attitude of doubt and skepticism; he draws a portrait of the artist as an irremediably lonely, amazingly independent soul, inhabiting a distinct historical moment between the faded Renaissance and the overconfident Enlightenment.
What Heaven Looks Like is a rare event: an encounter between a truly perceptive historian of images, and a master conjurer of them.
This book title, What Heaven Looks Like (Comments on a Strange Wordless Book), ISBN: 9781946053022, by James Elkins, published by Abbeville Publishing Group (September 19, 2017) is available in hardcover. Our minimum order quantity is 25 copies. All standard bulk book orders ship FREE in the continental USA and delivered in 4-10 business days.
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