PDF Download , by Olivia Laing

PDF Download , by Olivia Laing

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, by Olivia Laing

, by Olivia Laing


, by Olivia Laing


PDF Download , by Olivia Laing

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, by Olivia Laing

Product details

File Size: 2818 KB

Print Length: 337 pages

Page Numbers Source ISBN: 1782111239

Publisher: Picador (March 1, 2016)

Publication Date: March 1, 2016

Sold by: Amazon Digital Services LLC

Language: English

ASIN: B00VE68J5W

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Amazon Best Sellers Rank:

#42,592 Paid in Kindle Store (See Top 100 Paid in Kindle Store)

I am an artist and a loner, even when surrounded by people, so the concept of this book was appealing to me. The author relates her journey of being alone in NYC after a nasty break-up, and researches the lives of artists and other loners to explore how they expressed loneliness. While the subject sounds depressing, anyone who has had moments (or lifetimes) of feeling left out and ignored will connect to some of the people in this book. She focuses primarily on four artists, the most well known being Andy Warhol and Edward Hopper. The other two are David Wojnarowicz, a photographer in New York during the late 70's who would become a vocal AIDS activist, and Henry Darger, a janitor in Chicago who created a complex fantasy world of art and writing in his cramped apartment, hidden from everyone until after his death. The section on Hopper feels like the outlier here, as he seems more of a miserable curmudgeon that someone longing for connection. There are so few interviews from him that the author is challenged to flesh out the chapter; I found myself skipping paragraphs in the this section of the book due to the lack of solid information and too much speculation on what Hopper was really feeling when he created his imagery. The writing gets so much better after this, however, as the author finds connections through the material. There is much more information available on Andy Warhol, and I gained a better understanding of his creative process and personal anguish. The chapter on Henry Darger is fascinating and a bit creepy. Was he a child-like innocent or a perverted pedophile? He never acted on his ideas, so we don't know. The story of David Wojnarowicz is the most harrowing. Unwanted, abused, and turning tricks on the streets as a young teen he lived by his wits and managed to hash out a substantial career with his photography of the tattered New York of the 70's and 80's. The author ties David's story to the gay scene in New York at that time, the AIDS epidemic and subsequent fear-mongering that tore through that community, and Warhol's last years befriending the wild and destructive artist Jean Michel Basquiat. Laing's final observations are poignant and original. Highly recommended.

This book will be in my collection til the day I die. There is so much truth and depth in the writing. As someone who has not delved into the world of art history, or criticism, I found my self completely intrigued by the artists spoken about and amazed how unaware I was of most of it. I'm impressed with the author's thinking and perspective on the brutality of loneliness. It's so darkly refreshing to know how many great minds suffer in this complexly cruel world, and somehow use that pain to make works of art. I too live in NY and am saddened and appalled by the changes in this once really interesting, artistic city that has become a playground for the very wealthy and lost so much in the process. A compelling read and quite educational. I also can't stop watching Klaus Nomi sing "Lightning Strikes" on youtube.

I took a long time to get through this terrific book, but learned alot about some artists I was ignorant of, and more about artists I knew about. She shows poignantly how tenderly art can help us when times are especially hard. I liked that she didn't idealize New York City.

Having read Olivia Laing's first two books, this one is just as subtle, evocative and empathic. I can't wait for her to write more - on any topic at all. She is a "must read" for every person who yearns for intelligent literature

I am a lover of descriptive language. When I first read the sample pages of this book online, I was excited to dig into the rest. The author seemed at the beginning to grasp the idea of loneliness in a way so relatable, and was able to put it into words beautifully. As the pages went by thought, a term came to mind -- purple prose. Dressing up one's writing so much so that the message is lost behind pretty words and elaborate descriptions. The book quickly reads pretentious and it grows distracting and tiresome. Added to this is the strange idolization of some troubled people that seems to have long since passed the stage of fascination in an attempt to understand the burden of loneliness. Along the way, it ceased being relatable. Opposite of what some of the other reviewers have said, I found the more interesting parts of this book to be when the author reminisces on her own experiences, recounting her feelings when faced with solitude, only for her to then veer off in the direction of other artists, often times so quickly I forgot who was being discussed. Just as often, it veered into more political content, completely off topic from the promise of what this book would be. Overall, it wasn't a terrible read, but it was a chore to get through this book. It may be best read in small doses, and understanding that it is more a study of several artists from New York, than a feeling of loneliness while surrounded by people.

Olivia Laing has a talent in weaving her personal experience with art, culture and politics. She talks about loneliness--one of the most common ironies of our modern life--through the works and lives of American artists--Hopper, Warhol, Wojnarowicz, Darger, Nomi, Garbo, Solanas, Holliday. I was not familiar with many of the artists she covers in this book, and it was a worthy effort to check them out in the surrounding political and cultural context of their loneliness and to learn how each one dealt with it through art and activism. The book ends with profound understanding of the nature of modern loneliness, as personal, political and collective space in the individuals and society and of the symbolisms of stitches and glues against "gentrification of emotions."

Olivia Laing is an excellent author who can sympathize and empathize with the people who she writes about, a very excellent book. She covers the eras well and fits well all the painters are about and what they are representing as well as explaining who and what they are. Probably the best art book I have read. Very in depth and understandable. Thanks

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