En este libro dedicado al viaje perdido de Rimbaud a Asia, el crítico y novelista Jamie James pesquisa todos los hechos relacionados con el episodio. De este modo, y a partir de conjeturas acerca de lo que el poeta pudo haber hecho, reconstruye y recrea la vida durante el siglo XIX en Java. El libro termina con una inquisicion exhaustiva acerca de lo que Oriente significo en la imaginacion del poeta, en paralelo con la entretenida, por momentos escandalosa historia del orientalismo frances, siempre entre la pose decorativa y el exabrupto colonialista.Rimbaud en Java es una mezcla altamente concentrada de critica, biografia y narrativa de viajes, que pone en foco y en perspectiva el encuentro extraordinario entre el gran poeta y un mundo extinguido.
Pop Art An introduction to the great masters of the Pop Art movement.Jamie James One of a series of introductory books on the great masters and movements in art This volume on the Pop Art movement contains an extensive essay, 48 full-page colour plates, and is accompanied by extensive notes and comparative illustrations Provides incomparable value Highly regarded for its insight and authority Pop Art was one of the most revolutionary art movements of the twentieth century. During the years of the Macmillan and Eisenhower administrations, a period of peace and prosperity and complacency the first Pop artists attempted to deflate the established order. Their audacity at first scandalized the Establisment, but by the mid-1960s their work dominated the world art scene. In the 1950s, a group of artists in Great Britain and the USA, rather than despising popular culture, gladly embraced both its imagery and its methods. Photographs, advertisements, posters, cartoons and everyday objects formed the basis of their art. Roy Lichtenstein (1923-) painted scenes lifted straight from comic strips. Andy Warhol (1928-87) took photographs from newspapers and silkscreened them onto canvases in shocking, fluorescent colours. James Rosenquist (1933-), a billboard painter by training, borrowed banal images from advertising ant put them together to make absurd juxtapositions. More than any other art movement before or since, Pop Art exerted a strong influence on popular culture; its bold graphic style and insolence was widely imitated by the very media that had inspired it.