海角大神

Five glorious art books bring the gallery to your couch

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Chicago Art Institute
鈥淔ishing boats at Choshi in Shimosa,鈥 from the woodblock print series 鈥淥ne Thousand Views of the Sea鈥 by Hokusai, c. 1828-38.

The best art books lend themselves to exploration, exhilaration, and contemplation. They open you up to other cultures and eras without leaving the comfort of home. No jostling for an unobstructed view in crowded museum galleries, and no rush. You can spend hours happily turning pages or being absorbed in a single image.聽

These five books will transport you to early-19th-century Japan, late-19th-century England, and mid-20th-century America. They will heighten your appreciation for the magnificence of the planet鈥檚 tallest plants 鈥 and the soaring possibilities of human creativity.

Prolific Japanese master聽

"Hokusai," by Andreas Marks, Taschen, 722 pp., $200

Why We Wrote This

鈥楾is the season for gorgeous art books, which will delight armchair aficionados with everything from 19th-century Japanese wood block prints to 20th-century geometric-patterned textiles.

You鈥檙e going to need a big coffee table to accommodate two magnificent large-format books on the life and work of Japanese artist Katsushika Hokusai (1760-1849). The prolific master of Edo period woodblock ukiyo-e art 鈥 鈥渋mages of the floating world鈥 鈥 is best known for his series 鈥淭hirty-Six Views of Mount Fuji,鈥 but as these books demonstrate, he was proficient in other media.聽

Hokusai鈥檚 work, rooted in naturalism, is said to encompass some 30,000 prints, drawings, and paintings (including scrolls in ink and color on both paper and silk, book illustrations, and mass-produced copies). His subjects include landscapes, seascapes, bridges, cranes, warblers, mystical lions, and floral blossoms. He features scenes of daily life, including rituals and ceremonies, as well as portraits and caricatures of actors, poets, sumo wrestlers, courtesans, and laborers.聽

"Hokusai: A Life in Drawing," by Henri-Alexis Baatsch, Thames & Hudson, 224 pp., $125

鈥淗okusai: A Life in Drawing,鈥 published by Thames & Hudson, offers 150 detailed, full-color聽illustrations. Taschen鈥檚 monumental 鈥淗okusai,鈥 which runs to more than 700 oversize pages, encompasses a more comprehensive, chronologically arranged selection of his work.聽

Hokusai frequently incorporated poetry into his art, though neither book provides translations. Much of his early work featured crowds of people painted in earth tones accented by touches of pink, pale green, and burnt orange. His later, more familiar woodblock landscapes are rich in graduated shades of blue and green. One particularly alluring example depicts a group of men and women clad in blue-patterned kimonos gazing from a temple deck toward Mount Fuji.

Giving women their due

"Women Pioneers of the Arts and Crafts Movement," by Karen Livingstone, Thames & Hudson, 288 pp., $45.00

Publishers are continuing their initiative to honor long-overlooked women artists with several books this year, including 鈥淕reat Women Sculptors鈥 and the photography monograph 鈥淐onsuelo Kanaga.鈥 Particularly beguiling is 鈥淲omen Pioneers of the Arts & Crafts Movement鈥 by Karen Livingstone, which features 33 innovative women whose work helped shape British home decoration between 1880 and 1914.

Among the artists profiled are cousins Agnes and Rhoda Garrett, who co-founded the first woman鈥檚 interior design business in England in 1874 to create wallpaper, carpets, and furniture. Ethel Mary Charles, the first professional female architect in Britain, designed houses and cottages in the arts and crafts style in the early 20th century with her sister, Bessie Ada Charles. Kate Faulkner created the still-popular Mallow wallpaper design in 1879 for Morris & Co.

The range of crafts featured in the book encompasses painting, weaving, jewelry making, enamel and metalwork, bookbinding, stained glass, wood carving, and hand-painted pottery for big studios such as Minton. But many women, including those who operated the tapestry looms at Morris & Co., did not receive credit for executing the work of husbands and other collaborators. So it鈥檚 good to see Scottish artist Margaret Macdonald given her due for her significant contributions to the work of her husband, Charles Rennie Mackintosh. 聽

Celebrating trees

"Tree: Exploring the Arboreal World," by Phaidon Editors, with an introduction by Tony Kirkham, Phaidon, 352 pp., $64.95

鈥淭ree,鈥 the 10th title in Phaidon鈥檚 Explorer series, which also includes 鈥淏ird鈥 (2021) and 鈥淕arden鈥 (2023), offers a stunning visual survey of arboreal history in art and culture that spans continents and millennia. The sheer breadth and variety of the more than 300 images are phenomenal, with works as disparate as a 3,400-year-old Egyptian bas-relief and a 20th-century painting by David Hockney, 鈥淭he Arrival of Spring in Woldgate, East Yorkshire in 2011.鈥澛

There are lovely botanical drawings of chestnut leaves by John Ruskin dating from 1870 and chestnut flowers by Mary Delany from 1776. Familiar works include Lucas Cranach the Elder鈥檚 鈥淎dam and Eve鈥 from about 1526 and Walker Evans鈥 gnarly rooted 鈥淏anyan Tree, Florida鈥 from 1941. But there are also plenty of happy surprises and witty juxtapositions, such as Keith Haring鈥檚 鈥淭ree of Life,鈥 which shares a spread with Dr. Seuss鈥 鈥淭he Lorax.鈥澛

More sobering are several works that show the devastating effects of clear-cutting rainforests, including Niklaus Troxler鈥檚 鈥淒ead Trees, 1992鈥 and Jacques Jangoux鈥檚 bleak, monochromatic Amazon landscape, 鈥淒estroyed Rainforest, c. 2015.鈥 聽

A handy timeline tracing the history of trees from 470 million years ago to the present strengthens this book鈥檚 compelling case for conserving these magnificent woody plants, which provide 28% of the Earth鈥檚 oxygen and absorb about 30% of carbon emissions. 聽

Mid-century modern geometrics

"Alexander Girard: Let the Sun In," by Todd Oldham and Kiera Coffee, Phaidon, 408 pp., $125

You may not recognize the name Alexander Girard (1907-1993), but if you鈥檙e a fan of mid-century modern design, chances are you鈥檒l recognize his abstract and geometric-patterned textiles.聽

Highlights of Girard鈥檚 long and varied career include collaborations with Charles and Ray Eames during the years he led Herman Miller鈥檚 textile department, which still produces many of his bold designs. Concurrently, Girard created chic, modern furniture for private clients. His brightly colored, folk art-inspired design for the Latin聽American-themed restaurant La Fonda del Sol brought a ray of sunshine to Manhattan鈥檚 Time & Life building in 1960. In creating a distinctive new look for Braniff International Airways in 1965, Girard perked up the company鈥檚 image with a custom typeface and 56 textiles in stripes, checks, solids, and a futuristic black-and-white fabric that incorporated the airline鈥檚 new logos.聽

Girard is also known for his collection of folk art, which has been displayed since 1982 in a wing he designed in Santa Fe鈥檚 Museum of International Folk Art. It is impossible to capture in photographs the scale of this exhibit created to 鈥渄isturb and enchant the eye.鈥 But there鈥檚 enchantment aplenty to be found in this book.

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