艺术
天梯:蔡国强的艺术 (2016) 豆瓣
8.4 (349 个评分) 导演: 凯文·麦克唐纳 演员: 蔡国强 / 吴红虹
其它标题: 蔡国强:天梯 / Sky Ladder: The Art of Cai Guo-Qiang
《天梯:蔡国强的艺术》是当今世界最重要艺术家之一蔡国强的首部电影纪录片。既是一个从中国出发、成为具国际影响力艺术家的励志故事,也体现着新时代中国人的追求和精神。
本片由奥斯卡金奖导演凯文·麦克唐纳(Kevin Macdonald)耗时两年,从纽约、布宜诺斯艾利斯、上海、北京、浏阳到家乡泉州,遍访艺术家的工作现场及其亲友、工作伙伴和专家,无限度深入蔡国强的工作和生活,并从数千小时的珍贵历史影像素材撷取精华,讲述蔡国强 80 年代从泉州出发,30 年来在五大洲不同文化间成长,并走向国际舞台成为享誉全球的爆破艺术家。纪录片中也揭露他壮观艺术背后的另一个真实—内心的脆弱、挣扎、妥协,和对家人、故乡、祖国土地深厚内敛的家国情怀。
影片主线《天梯》—— 一座500米高的金色焰火梯子嘶吼着拔地而起,与无垠宇宙对话。这是蔡国强少年时代仰望天空、摸云摘星的梦想,二十多年来在世界不同地方屡试屡败,却从未放弃。2015年6月黎明,泉州小渔村惠屿岛海边,在国内技术专家和当地数百村民的帮助和见证下,他再次一搏,把《天梯》作为献给百岁奶奶和家乡的礼物……
2022年3月10日 看过
看完MAP的蔡国强展之后为了给妈妈讲天梯又拿出来看了遍,从纪录片角度这个片子真是做得很碎,故事也没讲好,尤其是当中穿插的时代背景等都太肤浅了,也不好好挖掘下蔡和家乡、和奶奶的深刻的关系。好多33 studio在各个他的展做的短片都比这个清楚。但是冲着它拍到了在泉州做的天梯,又让我们都看到这个也许本来更加私人的作品,大概也值了。
中国 纪录片 艺术 蔡国强
稍息 豆瓣
8.4 (8 个评分) 作者: [意大利] 老安 上海文艺出版社 2021 - 11
意大利摄影家老安在华40年首部摄影集。
190张照片,记录在改革开放之初的“稍息年代”,
普通中国人如何小心翼翼走向真正意义上的生活。
在这些照片中,我们将目击自己的记忆,也将看见我们的遗忘,
并重新发现有待省察的生活。
陈丹青、余华、刘小东、顾铮、彭磊、李静、冯梦波等推荐
————
本书收录了意大利摄影家老安(Andrea Cavazzuti)1981到1984年在中国拍摄的190余帧照片,记录下了那个“稍息年代”里中国人的一些日常生活场景。
照片里的中国,刚刚走出动荡不安的岁月,尚未来得及拥抱传真手机网络等工具。那是一段罕见的、短暂的沉静时刻,人们在喘一口气,准备跃入即将来临的狂热。
老安的摄影,聚焦于普通中国人的日常生活。在端正的构图里,在有限的画幅中,捕捉无穷无尽的细节。它们无意于报道与解释,却留存下一个时代的气氛。我们将在这些照片中目击自己的记忆,也将看见我们的遗忘,并重新发现有待省察的生活。
本书还收录了陈丹青、刘小东、顾铮的评论文章,老安与奥利沃·巴尔别里、彭磊、冯梦波的对谈,以及老安用中文撰写的风趣幽默的散文作品:《气呼呼的小词典》。
————
这些照片极其珍贵,它们干净,有内涵。既不首肯,又不否认,而是设身处地。
——奥利沃·巴尔别里 [摄影家]
你有过瞢忪发呆的时刻吗——忽然忆及很久前的一幕,陷入深深的、长久的发呆,没有思绪,不带情感,只是呆呆“看见”了自己的记忆——这时刻,就是老安的摄影。太动人了。他成功地使观看者忽略,以至不发觉他的照片如何动人,就像照片中的人没发觉他。
——陈丹青 [画家,作家]
老安的照片,对于我们这一代中国人是弥足珍贵的记忆。在这一张张或安静或活跃的黑白照片里,我们看到过去的自己如何挣脱束缚,小心翼翼走向真正意义上的生活。
——余华 [作家]
老安从来不骚扰他眼前景观,从来不把镜头推得更近,从不把自己的欲望表现在前。老安总是保持和物象间礼貌的距离,摈弃滥情、摈弃抱怨、摈弃明辨是非,像个过来人,不愤怒、不嘲讽……
——刘小东 [画家]
老安用照相机插入现实的瞬间,可能是一个相当暧昧的瞬间,是一个并不说明什么的瞬间,但就是这个瞬间,可能抽出、保留了某个时代的某个时刻的气氛,观者可以据此确认时代。
——顾铮 [摄影评论家]
老安的摄影,宛如契诃夫式的戏剧:散漫,无中心,在一个意义稀薄的日常空间里,重要性大致相当的主人公们微弱地行动着,无所事事,波澜不惊,却在剧终,一切富有韵律、貌似熟悉的细节蓦地发生核聚变,轰然达成一个诗意而陌生的象征。
——李静 [作家]
看老安的照片,给我那种小时候在中国到处转悠的感觉,每个地方完全都不一样……这么素、这么平淡的照片,现在看起来反倒有些不一样的感觉,比较时髦的感觉。
——彭磊 [导演,音乐人]
老安的照片几乎没有碰出来的东西,里面都有看头。
——冯梦波 [艺术家]
2021年12月26日 已读
感谢好友送的生日礼物让我的确在胡乱忙碌了一学期之后借机“稍息”了一下。81-84年的中国至今在我心中好像都不是四十年前的事,但是看着这些年代感其实并没有那么强的照片好像又觉得这个有点前现代又有点新生儿的懵懂的“稍息时代”的确非常遥远了。然而能得出这个题名到底是要靠回望才知道。看照片的时候想的是,也没必要带着《昨日的世界》一样的眼光去美化那个日常,这样的图像好像翻看家庭影集就能找到。看前后的文字的时候又觉得,那个时空的错位感和一个外来人(外星人一样)的特定位置真是非常有趣,气呼呼的小词典真是太可爱了。仿佛赶上了三个“好时代”老安14年就写出了中国之后是岔路口这样的话,且看吧。
2021 中国 单读 摄影 艺术
Flâneuse 豆瓣
作者: Lauren Elkin Farrar, Straus and Giroux 2017 - 2
A flâneuse is, in Lauren Elkin’s words, “a determined resourceful woman keenly attuned to the creative potential of the city, and the liberating possibilities of a good walk.” Virginia Woolf called it “streethaunting,” Holly Golightly epitomized it in Breakfast at Tiffany’s, and Patti Smith did it in her own inimitable style in 1960s New York.
Part cultural meander, part memoir, Flâneuse traces the relationship between singular women and their cities as a way to map her own life―a journey that begins in New York and takes us to Paris, via Venice, Tokyo, and London―including the paths beaten by such flâneuses as the cross-dressing, nineteenth-century novelist George Sand, the Parisian artist Sophie Calle, the journalist Martha Gellhorn, and the writer Jean Rhys. With tenacity and insight, Elkin creates a mosaic of what urban settings have meant to women, charting through literature, art, history, and film women’s sometimes liberating, sometimes fraught relationship to the metropolis.
2020年3月12日 已读
这本意外也四天就听完了,可能女性朗读者真的比较容易听进去。题材选得很好,涵盖了Virginia Woolf, George Sand, Sophie Calle, Martha Gellhorn, Agnes Varda等各个女性艺术家as flâneuse,文笔也是好的,但是作者太自我中心了,越听到后面越厌倦,尤其是对东京的expat视角,一个不喜欢brooklyn的长岛人,一个写到巴黎只知道写5/6区的人实在太没有探索精神了,和书的主题简直背道而驰。结果发现是我校的比较文学博士,why am I not surprised (wink).
女性 文学 旅行 艺术 都市
传奇字体 (2007) 豆瓣 TMDB IMDb 维基数据
Helvetica
8.4 (90 个评分) 导演: 加利·哈斯特维特 演员: Michael Bierut / Neville Brody
其它标题: Helvetica / 海维提卡
由独立制片人导演Gary Hustwit执导拍摄的纪录片《传奇字体》,讲述了Helvetica字体从起源诞生到它的特性和影响力,影片访谈了不同时期的老中青三代设计师,畅谈这款简洁、直接、醒目的传奇字体背后的故事。
1957年,新字体Helvetica由麦克斯·米耶丁格和爱德华德·霍夫曼在瑞士Münchenstein的哈斯铸造所作为排版铅字制作。新的工业化时代正在来临,这种容易辨识和阅读的字体形式更适应快节奏的生活和工业化生产的需要,很快风靡世界。2007年,Helvetica字体诞生满五十周年。Helvetica字体已然存在于我们随处可见的任何一处角落,几乎成为了工业文明和机械化的象征。
2019年3月21日 看过
断断续续看了好几天,从Helvetica入手讲字体设计的发展,特别是大家不断赋予它各种各样的意义,打破又回归,这个过程本身非常有趣。最后记个冷知识: Helvetica means Swiss in Latin.
typography 字体 纪录片 艺术 设计
葛饰北斋:为画痴狂 (2017) 豆瓣
Hokusai: Old Man Crazy to Paint
8.1 (51 个评分) 导演: Patricia Wheatley 演员: 蒂姆·克拉克 / 罗杰·凯斯
其它标题: Hokusai: Old Man Crazy to Paint / 葛飾北齋:畫狂老人(台)
The first UK film biography of the world-renowned Japanese artist Katsushika Hokusai (1760-1849), whose print The Great Wave is as globally famous as Leonardo's Mona Lisa. With Andy Serkis reading the voice of Hokusai, the film features artists David Hockney and Maggi Hambling, and passionate scholars who study, admire and venerate this great Japanese master.
The film focuses on Hokusai's work, life and times in the great, bustling metropolis of Edo, now modern Tokyo. Using extraordinary close-ups and pioneering 8K Ultra HD video technology, Hokusai's prints and paintings are examined by world experts. In the process they reveal new interpretations of famous works and convey the full extent of Hokusai's extraordinary achievement as a great world artist.
Hokusai spent his life studying and celebrating our common humanity as well as deeply exploring the natural and spiritual worlds, using the famous volcano Mount Fuji as a protective presence and potential source of immortality. He knew much personal tragedy, was struck by lightning and lived for years in poverty, but never gave up his constant striving for perfection in his art. Hokusai influenced Monet, Van Gogh and other Impressionists, is the father of manga and has his own Great Wave emoji.
2019年2月19日 看过
看的是一小时版的。晚年作品好神,Red/Pink Fuji初刻板的色彩描述真精准,8K放大得以看到的细节,真是一种跨越时空的感动啊。
2017 BBC 日本 浮世绘 纪录片
旅行的艺术 豆瓣
The Art of Travel
8.2 (75 个评分) 作者: [英] 阿兰·德波顿 译者: 南治国 / 彭俊豪 上海译文出版社 2004 - 4
这部书就像一场完美的旅程,教我们如何好奇、思考和观察,让我们重新对生命充满热情。旅行是什么,德波顿并不想急于提供答案,旅行为什么,德波顿似乎也不热心去考求。但释卷之后,相信每个读者都会得到一种答案——这答案,既是思辩的,也是感性的,既酣畅淋漓,又难以言说,因为,它更像是一种情绪 ,令人沉醉而不自知翻开这本书,你踏上的将是一次异乎寻常的阅读旅程。深信德波顿无处不在的智慧和机智将影响甚至改变你对旅行的看法,并有可能改变你日后的旅行心态和旅行方式。德波顿是一个知识渊厚且富有逻辑思辨能力的作者。他曾经是大学的哲学讲师,有着深厚的哲学素养,从苏格拉底、洪堡,到爱默生、尼采,他都有过系统的阅读。此外,对西方文学和艺术作品,他也有广泛的涉猎。因此,在论及“旅行”这一近平陈词滥调的题材时,他不仅时时表现出理性的悟觉,而且还能结合福楼拜、波德莱尔等文学家的创作,参照凡·高等画家的作品,多方位地观照“旅行”、剖析“旅行”。
2019年1月3日 已读
09/2/18标了在读,印象中应该至少读了第一章和最后一章,19/1/2在从île de ré开回大巴黎地区的路上听完了英语版的全书,非常适合度假过后回味的心情。里面提到的大多是法国作家和场景,十年后去过了大多书里提到的地方,也对提到的人物和画都较为熟悉。听的时候也顺便回味了好几段旅行,觉得也算是习得了how to possess beauty and maintain a traveller’s mindset吧。
哲学 散文 文学 旅行 生活
脸庞,村庄 (2017) 维基数据 IMDb Eggplant.place 豆瓣 TMDB
Visages villages
9.2 (688 个评分) 导演: 阿涅斯·瓦尔达 / 让·热内 演员: 阿涅斯·瓦尔达 / 让·热内
其它标题: Visages villages / 眼睛相旅行(港)
第42届多伦多国际电影节(2017)纪录片单元观众选择奖,法国新浪潮祖母阿涅斯·瓦尔达与街头艺术家JR导演,纪录片伴随两人驾驶着JR的小货车穿越法国的村庄。一路上他们拍摄下所遇到的人物,然后在房子和工厂的墙上涂抹告示牌尺寸大小的肖像画。已申报奥斯卡最佳纪录片。
2017年12月25日 看过
年末终于看了这样一部温暖跳脱的片子,真好。Agnes怎么88岁还是少女心爆棚的感觉,轻盈有趣又充满人文关怀。JR那部车子里出来的每张人像都好美。好想和他们一起安静地坐下来看看村庄,看看人来人往的脸庞。
2017 AgnesVarda JR 纪录片 艺术
至爱梵高·星空之谜 (2017) 维基数据 IMDb 豆瓣 TMDB
Loving Vincent
8.4 (936 个评分) 导演: 多洛塔·科别拉 / 休·韦尔什曼 演员: 道格拉斯·布斯 / 罗伯特·古拉奇克
其它标题: Loving Vincent / 至爱梵高
影片用一封无法投递的信件串联起梵高在去世前最后六周里与他生命中最重要的三个人物之间的秘密,带观众穿越回十九世纪末的欧洲,并陪伴梵高走完他最后的人生。影片采用梵高原画作品中的人物原型还原梵高的艺术人生,让观众在享受美得令人窒息的视觉盛宴时,抽丝剥茧地发现隐藏了一个半世纪的秘密。
2017年10月24日 看过
65,000 canvases! Such a painstaking tribute!|“One day I would like show by my work, what this non-entity has in his heart.” Sadly overdue.
动画 梵高 波兰 艺术
How to Read Chinese Paintings 豆瓣
作者: Maxwell K. Hearn Yale University Press 2008 - 8
The Chinese often use the expression du hua, “to read a painting,” in connection with their study and appreciation of such works. This volume closely “reads” thirty-six masterpieces of Chinese painting from the encyclopedic collection of The Metropolitan Museum of Art in order to reveal the major characteristics and themes of this rich pictorial tradition. The book examines multiple layers of meaning—style, technique, symbolism, past traditions, and the artist’s personal circumstances—through accessible texts and numerous large color details. A dynastic chronology, map, and list of further readings supplement the text.
Spanning a thousand years of Chinese art, these landscapes, flowers, birds, figures, religious subjects, and calligraphies illuminate the main goal of every Chinese artist: to capture not only the outer appearance of a subject but also its inner essence.
宣言 (2015) 豆瓣
Manifesto
7.2 (46 个评分) 导演: 朱利安·罗斯菲德 演员: 凯特·布兰切特 / Erika Bauer
其它标题: Manifesto / 反艺术宣言(港)
Cate Blanchett 将在在圣丹斯首映的电影 “Manifesto” 中扮演13个不同的角色。
2016年12月19日 看过
大魔王一人演活12个角色,旁白声音也好听得不得了,13个短片能掐点在差不多时间开始manifesto的同时性蛮震撼的。希望以后能看到所有的文本,里面有些art movement(涵盖了将近二十个)不熟好像梗没有得到。@ParkAvenueAmory
CateBlanchett 艺术
卢浮宫的珍宝 (2013) 豆瓣
Treasures of the Louvre
8.2 (12 个评分) 导演: Alastair Laurence 演员: Andrew Hussey
其它标题: Treasures of the Louvre
Paris-based writer Andrew Hussey travels through the glorious art and surprising history of an extraordinary French institution to show that the story of the Louvre is the story of France. As well as exploring the masterpieces of painters such as Veronese, Rubens, David, Chardin, Gericault and Delacroix, he examines the changing face of the Louvre itself through its architecture and design. Medieval fortress, Renaissance palace, luxurious home to kings, emperors and more recently civil servants, today it attracts eight million visitors a year. The documentary also reflects the very latest transformation of the Louvre - the museum's recently-opened Islamic Gallery.
2016年1月30日 看过
Refreshment of my recent Louvre visit. Apart from the treasures it hosts, Louvre definitely is a piece of art itself, with the history it entailed and the art it nourished.
2013 BBC 卢浮宫 文化 法国
Arts, Culture and the Making of Global Cities 豆瓣
Lily Kong, Ching Chia-ho, Chou Tsu-Lung
作者: Lily Kong / C. H. Ching Edward Elgar Pub 2015 - 1
While global cities have mostly been characterized as sites of intensive and extensive economic activity, the quest for global city status also increasingly rests on the creative production and consumption of culture and the arts. Arts, Culture and the Making of Global Cities examines such ambitions and projects undertaken in five major cities in Asia: Beijing, Shanghai, Hong Kong, Taipei and Singapore.
Providing a thorough comparison of their urban imaging strategies and attempts to harness arts and culture, as well as more organically evolved arts activities and spaces, this book analyses the relative successes and failures of these cities. Offering rich ethnographic detail drawn from extensive fieldwork, the authors challenge city strategies and existing urban theories about cultural and creative clusters and reveal the many complexities in the art of city-making.
This noteworthy study will appeal to undergraduate and graduate students, as well as academics from a variety of disciplines ranging from urban and cultural geography to Asian studies. Arts and cultural policy makers and artists will also find this a fascinating read.
2015年5月20日 已读
难得自己创建条目,因为要写和亚洲美术馆有关的东西问Sharon借来的。话题基本围绕Cultural mega-projects,branding city and the global neoliberal imperative. 着重看了香港的西九进程。书里涉及的内容都蛮新的。比较希望之后看到有人做关于上海西岸文化走廊的整个发展过程。
2015 Mega-projects 亚洲 城市研究 社会学
纽约琐记(修订版) 豆瓣
8.2 (57 个评分) 作者: 陈丹青 广西师范大学出版社 2007 - 11
这本书是陈丹青纽约生涯的结账,初事写作的开端……他的生活因这本书从此转向,出现新地带。和其它几本书相比,陈丹青说“这本书不越界、没脾气,聊聊纽约、谈谈艺术,自然显得雅,而久在域外,所谓生活积累比较厚,要论写作的闲静与专注,也确是这本书”。初版分为两册,下册多是访谈、杂稿,修订版全部删除。
The Architecture of Happiness 豆瓣
作者: Alain De Botton Pantheon 2006 - 3
From Publishers Weekly
With this entertaining and stimulating book, de Botton (How Proust Can Change Your Life) examines the ways architecture speaks to us, evoking associations that, if we are alive to them, can put us in touch with our true selves and influence how we conduct our lives. Because of this, he contends, it's the architect's task to design buildings that contribute to happiness by embodying ennobling values. While he makes no claim to be able to define true beauty in architecture, he suggests some of the virtues a building should have (illustrated by pictures on almost every spread): order combined with complexity; balance between contrasting elements; elegance that appears effortless; a coherent relationship among the parts; and self-knowledge, which entails an understanding of human psychology, something that architects all too often overlook. To underscore his argument, de Botton includes many apt examples of buildings that either incorporate or ignore these qualities, discussing them in ways that make obvious their virtues or failings. The strength of his book is that it encourages us to open our eyes and really look at the buildings in which we live and work. A three-part series of the same title will air on PBS this fall. (Oct. 3)
Copyright © Reed Business Information, a division of Reed Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.
From The Washington Post's Book World/washingtonpost.com
While happily reading Alain de Botton's graceful musings about architectural beauty, I was suddenly struck by the photograph of the Edgar J. Kaufmann House in Palm Springs, Calif., designed by Richard Neutra in 1946. I turned the page to see what de Botton had to say about it:
"The bourgeois couples who lived in Richard Neutra's mid-twentieth-century steel and glass pavilions in California may at times have drunk too much, squabbled, been insincere and overwhelmed by anxiety, but at least their buildings spoke to them of honesty and ease, of a lack of inhibition and a faith in the future."
That was all. Odd, I thought. De Botton never points out that this same Edgar J. Kaufmann commissioned the most beautiful private home in America, Fallingwater. He was. Nor, I discovered after checking the index, does he mention its architect, a certain Frank Lloyd Wright. Not once.
There's no obvious reason why the author of How Proust Can Save Your Life and The Consolation of Philosophy should leave out Wright. Perhaps he simply decided to challenge himself, to see if he could manage the trick, just as the French novelist Georges Perec once published a perfectly readable novel in which none of the words contain the letter E. Certainly, de Botton otherwise reveals his usual wide learning, lyrically deployed. He discusses the neoclassical influence of Palladio, the impact of Horace Walpole's Gothic extravaganza Strawberry Hill on 19th-century building in Britain, the austere concrete housing of Le Corbusier (who once dubbed his sterile tenements "machines for living"). But mysteriously, almost tantalizingly, he avoids the vastly influential, world-famous Wright, whose houses are so serenely beautiful to look at and yet almost impossible to live in comfortably -- at least if you slouch, have children or collect anything. Not surprisingly, The Architecture of Happiness is itself a carefully designed book, tightly constructed around the photographs that appear on virtually every other page. (Another mystery: Which came first, the images or the text?) There are pictures of castles, cathedrals, office buildings, private homes, bridges, hallways, windows, chairs, ironwork. De Botton visits a theme park in Japan built to resemble 17th-century Amsterdam, shows us a 30-foot-high obelisk memorializing a beloved pig, interprets the monumental elegance of the Royal Crescent in Bath, and discusses both the early modern pursuit of functionality and the ancient Japanese esthetic of wabi, which "identified beauty with unpretentious, simple, unfinished, transient things."
Throughout, de Botton argues that the buildings we walk by, work in or come home to affect how we feel. They influence our mood, our sensibility, our very character. No one is likely to disagree with this, especially those of us who dispiritedly sink down into our windowless office cubicles day after day or vainly yearn for just one room, let alone an entire house, like those in Architectural Digest. Alas, much of the time we must simply accept what we are given or settle for what we can afford. For at no point does de Botton seriously address the economics of architecture and interior design. Even if you do it yourself, construction of any kind, especially the highly individualized, is almost prohibitively expensive.
This reality, however, doesn't undercut de Botton's essential point: "Buildings speak -- and on topics which can readily be discerned. They speak of democracy or aristocracy, openness or arrogance, welcome or threat, a sympathy for the future or a hankering for the past." In short, "they speak of visions of happiness." De Botton attempts to understand aspects of that happiness by touching on the achievements or failures of particular styles and constructions. He offers us, in effect, a handsome photo album printed on coated stock, augmented by thoughtful, highly polished paragraphs and pensées. Time after time, his descriptions neatly capture the distinctiveness and character of even the most unusual buildings. Admittedly, those who prefer their sentences strictly functional may sometimes judge de Botton's a tad lyrical, just as his mini-essays risk sounding a little gushy. For the most part, though, he keeps his balance, largely through his quiet intelligence, passionate conviction and the charm of a personality lightly tinged with melancholy:
"The failure of architects to create congenial environments mirrors our inability to find happiness in other areas of our lives. Bad architecture is in the end as much a failure of psychology as of design. It is an example expressed through materials of the same tendency which in other domains will lead us to marry the wrong people, choose inappropriate jobs and book unsuccessful holidays: the tendency not to understand who we are and what will satisfy us.
"In architecture, as in so much else, we cast around for explanations to our troubles and fix on platitudinous targets. We get angry when we should realize we are sad and tear down ancient streets when we ought instead to introduce proper sanitation and street lights. We learn the wrong lessons from our griefs while grasping in vain for the origins of contentment.
"The places we call beautiful are, by contrast, the work of those rare architects with the humility to interrogate themselves adequately about their desires and the tenacity to translate their fleeting apprehensions of joy into logical plans -- a combination that enables them to create environments that satisfy needs we never consciously knew we even had."
De Botton concludes his book with an even more heartfelt plea: We must strive to build in a manner worthy of the meadows and woods we are destroying. "We owe it to the fields that our houses will not be inferiors of the virgin land they have replaced. We owe it to the worms and the trees that the buildings we cover them with will stand as promises of the highest and most intelligent kind of happiness."
Copyright 2006, The Washington Post. All Rights Reserved.
From Bookmarks Magazine
Alain De Botton, author of How Proust Can Change Your Life, The Art of Travel, and Status Anxiety, among other books, takes a humanistic approach in Architecture of Happiness and explores the ways in which our built environment affects us. He occasionally overindulges in florid prose, but critics agree that his more general observations of architecture are sound and interesting, if not entirely novel. The average reader will find much of interest in the broad range of eras, places, and styles that de Botton discusses. Well-placed photographs illustrate each point in the text. The book is so visual, in fact, that the BBC is making a three-part television series based on it, to air on PBS this fall.
Copyright © 2004 Phillips & Nelson Media, Inc.
Review
"De Botton is a lively guide, and his eclectic choices of buildings and locations evince his conclusion, that “we should be as unintimidated by architectural mediocrity as we are by unjust laws.”
—The New Yorker
The next time I'm at a party, and the conversation turns to "serious topics," like what the stock market did today, I think I'll suggest we talk about something more important: architecture. I'll ask the investment banker why he bought the house he did and insist he answer the question. And then I'll start quoting Alain de Botton.
—The National Post
If this book were a building, it would be a contemporary reading room, I think, with big windows, and clean, built-in bookshelves with a fold-out step ladder just right for fetching slim volumes from the top shelf. The elegant clarity and brisk humour of his style, accompanied by pages of photos, opens your eyes to the rich possibility of thinking about your home, and your city, in a new way.
—The Toronto Star
"De Botton's books are the literary equivalent of the Slow Food movement. They demand to be lingered over, not because the concepts are difficult but because they are rich and deep. Be prepared to put down your book frequently and turn his last few sentences over in your mind, testing his theses against the rooms and buildings you know well."
—The Globe and Mail
"In this simple, entertaining and brilliant book, Alain de Botton explores how architecture speaks to us and why it affects all aspects of human life. His great strength is to explain things we always knew but never understood."
—Christopher Hume, Architecture Critic, Toronto Star
“How did we ever manage without de Botton?”
— Sunday Times (U.K.)
“[de Botton] deals with questions of style, ideas of beauty, notions about why certain structures appeal to us. The author argues that we love beautiful buildings because they solidify ideas we have about ourselves and our world. They put into concrete form our aspirations; they compensate for our human weaknesses; in short, they make us happy. Virtually every page contains a sentence any essayist would be proud to have written. A lyrical and generously illustrated monograph about the intimate relationship between our buildings and ourselves.”
— Kirkus Reviews
“Singlehandedly, de Botton has taken philosophy back to its simplest and most important purpose: helping us live our lives.”
— Independent
Product Description
One of the great but often unmentioned causes of both happiness and misery is the quality of our environment: the kinds of walls, chairs, buildings and streets that surround us.
And yet a concern for architecture and design is too often described as frivolous, even self-indulgent. The Architecture of Happiness starts from the idea that where we are heavily influences who we can be, and it argues that it is architecture’s task to stand as an eloquent reminder of our full potential.
Whereas many architects are wary of openly discussing the word beauty, this book has at its center the large and naïve question: What is a beautiful building? It is a tour through the philosophy and psychology of architecture that aims to change the way we think about our homes, our streets and ourselves.
画布上的声音 豆瓣
作者: 聂作平 新疆人民出版社 2004 - 7
这是一本关于油画的小书,不过300多页,但却融合了作者的深度思考。
作者聂作平,这个生于天府之国的汉子,以难以抑制的心情,用文字记录下这些划过夜空的璀璨星辰,创作了这部力作————《画布上的声音》。
全书几乎对所有的油画大师和他们的名画都用心的进行了“刻画” ,如果说大师们是在用画笔诉说,那么作者便是文字的最佳阐释者。聂先生不仅是在传示画布上的声音,更是自己对生活的思考。文中处处可见肺腑之言,
我摘一段对莫奈的感想----任何时代的评论家几乎都可笑的落后于他们的时代,更落后于那些富有创新精神的作家和艺术家。如果尖锐一些的话,我认为评论家事实上都是一些吸着艺术家血液的虱子,他们从不雪中送炭,只会锦上添花。他们的全部努力既无助于新的艺术手法的诞生,反而是一种有害的垃圾。中国如此,西方亦如此;画坛如此,文坛也不例外。
2008年6月13日 已读
关键词的方式不错,不过由于是作者的主观评价,也没怎么上心。

还是喜欢凡高的部分,浓烈的色彩和混杂的情感,平时难以企及的狂热。
油画 艺术