Rogues' Gallery
Philip Hook
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Geisteswissenschaften, Kunst, Musik / Kunst
Beschreibung
Philip Hook takes the lid off the world of art dealing to reveal the brilliance, cunning, greed and daring of its practitioners. In a richly anecdotal narrative he describes the rise and occasional fall of the extraordinary men and women who over the centuries have made it their business to sell art to kings, merchants, nobles, entrepreneurs and museums.
From its beginnings in Antwerp, where paintings were sometimes sold by weight, to the rich hauteur of the contemporary gallery in London, Paris and New York, art dealing has been about identifying what is intangible but infinitely desirable, and then finding clients for whom it is irresistible. Those who have purveyed art for a living range from tailors, spies and the occasional anarchist to scholars, aristocrats, merchants and connoisseurs, each variously motivated by greed, belief in their own vision of art and its history, or simply the will to win.
The cast of characters includes Paul Durand-Ruel, the Impressionists' champion; Herwath Walden, who first brought Modernism into the limelight; Daniel-Henry Kahnweiler, high priest of Cubism; Leo Castelli, dealer-midwife to Abstract Expressionism and Pop Art; and Peter Wilson, the charismatic Sotheby's chairman who made the auction room theatre.
Philip Hook's history is one of human folly, greed and duplicity, interspersed with ingenuity, inspiration and acts of heroism. Rogues' Gallery is learned, witty and irresistibly readable.
Rezensionen
A breezy, whimsical and often wry compendium, chock-full of hard-won wisdom about what makes someone spend millions of dollars to buy an artwork at auction.
A cultured, witty, clear-eyed, worldly teacher with a fully functioning sense of humour. A real delight.
Fascinating...Hook writes with honesty and wry detachment
Illuminating...combines expertise with irreverence
Entertainingly written
He writes better about the physical nature and impact of painting than anyone I have read for years.
<p>Praise for <i>Breakfast at Sotheby's</i><br>'This book is a learned and thoughtful work of art history, but it also 'investigates in prurient detail the guilty but ever-fascinating relationship between art and money'
Fascinating
Mr Hook's] delightful <i>Breakfast at Sotheby's</i> is a house sale of a book, a chance for him to clear out 35 years of memories as an art dealer and auctioneer, first at Christie's and then Sotheby's, a rival auction house. Besides the colourful stories, Mr Hook offers various theories about the art world, and keen insight on that vexing question of what gives art value. Amid the well-known answers (provenance, colour, "wall power"
Remarkable
Hook...writes suavely and racily...has a fabulous ear for anecdotes...his entertaining book has a Wodehousian tone that makes even the most heinous act it describes glint with comedy
Fascinating and elegantly written...both wise and timely
Authoritative without being pompous and happy to mock his trade's absurdities, he explores offbeat subjects ... Even those who don'
A winner. Readers will learn more about the modern art market in this simple book than in any college course.
A pleasure to read
Wonderfully entertaining...full of cracking stories
Hook writes...eloquently and knowledgeably...witty and erudite
It'
Kundenbewertungen
counterfeit, Modernism, Abstract Expressionism, art dealer, London, New York, Ocean's Twelve, tailors, Leo Castelli, Paris, art, Daniel-Henry Kahnweiler, art dealing, galleries, auction, fake art, history, Herwath Walden, museums, contemporary gallery, Paul Durand-Ruel, Pop Art, Sotheby's, Cubism, Philip Hook, Peter Wilson, Christie's, art heist, the Impressionists