Just looking : essays on art

by John Updike

Paper Book, 1989

Status

Available

Publication

New York : Knopf : Distributed by Random House, 1989.

Description

Examines the delights of paintings and sculptures through a gallery of twentythree illustrated essays. The wit and sharp observation one expects from novelist/short story writer/poet/essayist Updike are found in these 23 pieces on art, supplemented by 193 plates. He offers trenchant views on Monet ("painting Nature in her nudity"); John Singer Sargent ("too facile"); Andrew Wyeth's "heavily hyped" series of Helga nudes; Degas's "patient invention of the snapshot before the camera itself was technically able to arrest motion and record the poetry of visual accident." He hops playfully from the "tender irony" of Richard Estes's hyperrealist Telephone Booths to a Vermeer townscape, and from children's book illustration to American children as depicted by Winslow Homer. He pauses to savor the unfamiliar or forgotten: Ralph Barton's wiry New Yorker cartoons, French sculptor Jean Ipousteguy's futuristic re-visioning of human anatomy, the elaborate, studied fantasies of churchgoing Yankee painter Erastus Salisbury Field.… (more)

User reviews

LibraryThing member sthitha_pragjna
Dubiously qualified. Pot-pourri of art that captures Updike's eclectic attention.
LibraryThing member jensenmk82
This beautiful volume is a lavishly illustrated tribute to John Updike's primal artistic interest, drawing and painting. For a deeper understanding of Updike's work, the interesting essays on John Singer Sargent, Ralph Barton, Jean Ipousteguy, and Andrew Wyeth are particularly noteworthy, as is the
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final essay on the interrelations of writing and the visual arts.
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LibraryThing member ValerieAndBooks
A collection of essays on art by John Updike, penned during the 1980s. Some of it feels dated -- little mention of women artists, for one, not to mention that several of these essays are based on exhibits shown back then. Still, Updike does discuss art in an interesting way.

I especially liked his
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thoughts on the Helga Pictures -- titled "Heavily Hyped Helga" -- mainly because my husband and I saw that exhibit on our honeymoon in San Francisco; and now we live in what could be considered Wyeth country.
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