image source: Vice Versa

Publisher Note

“I am one of the first generation artists who grew up in the suburbs. We grew up, post-WWII, in an ascendant America in which the suburbs was its utopian manifestation. We came into our art maturity painfully aware of the disconnection between what was promised and what was delivered.”—Eric Fischl

Eric Fischl (New York, 1948) is one of only a handful of contemporary painters who regularly, though by no means exclusively, employs sourced images, culled from the internet, newspapers, and magazines, to inform his paintings. The artist then adds his own photographs and blends a final ensemble of information and storytelling. No kings or generals or momentous battles move across Fischl’s canvases, and most of his subjects are quotidian rather than grandiose—suburban bourgeois families, art world mongers and awkward social interactions. In his works, communication is nonexistent and boredom is pervasive. The book, published on the occasion of a solo show held at Dallas Contemporary museum, includes more than 120 painting reproductions and a conversation between Eric Fischl and Peter Doroshenko.

Artist Monograph

Eric Fischl

If Art Could Talk

Publisher
Release Place Milan, Italy
Edition 1st edition
Release Date 2018
Credits
Artist: Eric Fischl
Identifiers
ISBN-13: 978-88-6749-332-6
Work  
Subform Catalogue
Topics Art Market, Gallery, Painting
Methods Painting
Language English
Format Hardcover
Dimensions 20.0 × 25.5 cm
Weight 563 gram
Pages 128

last updated 840 days ago

Data Contributor: Vice Versa

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