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Walks to the Paradise Garden: A Lowdown Southern Odyssey [Kietas viršelis]

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Text by , Photographs by , Edited by , Photographs by
  • Formatas: Hardback, 352 pages, aukštis x plotis x storis: 241x170x25 mm, weight: 998 g, 180 Illustrations
  • Išleidimo metai: 06-Jun-2019
  • Leidėjas: Insitute 193
  • ISBN-10: 1732848203
  • ISBN-13: 9781732848207
Kitos knygos pagal šią temą:
  • Formatas: Hardback, 352 pages, aukštis x plotis x storis: 241x170x25 mm, weight: 998 g, 180 Illustrations
  • Išleidimo metai: 06-Jun-2019
  • Leidėjas: Insitute 193
  • ISBN-10: 1732848203
  • ISBN-13: 9781732848207
Kitos knygos pagal šią temą:

A classic grand tour of Southern folk art, from Howard Finster to Lonnie Holley

Walks to the Paradise Garden is the last unpublished manuscript of the late American poet, photographer, publisher, Black Mountain alumnus and bon viveur Jonathan Williams (1929–2008). This 352-page book chronicles Williams' road trips across the Southern United States with photographers Guy Mendes and Roger Manley in search of the most authentic and outlandish artists the South had to offer. Williams describes the project thus: "The people and places in Walks to the Paradise Garden exist along the blue highways of America.… We have traveled many thousands of miles, together and separately, to document what tickled us, what moved us, and what (sometimes) appalled us." The majority of these road trips took place in the 1980s, a pivotal decade in the development of Southern "yard shows," and many of the artists are now featured in major institutions. This book, however, chronicles them at the outset of their careers and provides essential context for their inclusion in the art historical canon. Taking its name from the famous artwork by Howard Finster, Walks to the Paradise Garden brings to light rare images and stories of Southern artists and creators who existed in near anonymity during the last half of the 20th century. Organized in chapters devoted to each artist, the book features Banner Blevins, Henry Dorsey, Sam Doyle, Howard Finster, Lonnie Holley, Ralph Eugene Meatyard, Sister Gertrude Morgan, William C. Owens, Vollis Simpson, Edgar Tolson and Jeff Williams, among many others.

Recenzijos

Williams manuscript, now exhumed, provides a welcome catalyst for the reexamination of the discourse surrounding self taught artists, both in relation to the major museum efforts for inclusion and the shifting language used to place this work within a larger canon of art history. -- Ryan Filchak * Seen * A journey begun without a map or a clear destination, the book stops along the way for places of good eating (Williams devotes a chapter to Ridgewood Barbecue in Bluff City, TN) and breaks up the wayward narrative with examples of yard or store signs seen or photographed along the road. -- Richard B. Woodward * Collector Daily * [ Walks to the Paradise Garden: A Lowdown Southern Odyssey is] a valuableif unorthodoxaddition to the history of self-taught art. -- Anne Doran * ARTnews * [ A] masterwork collection of rare stories and photos of now-famous Southern folk artists. -- CJ Lotz * Garden and Gun * The book contains much of the original wildness of the self-taught artists, photographers, and poet alike. Williams writes in a raucous free-form language alongside documentary photographs by Roger Manley and Guy Mendes. -- Karen Tauches * Burnaway * Walks to the Paradise Garden: A Lowdown Southern Odyssey is a new book of historical importance in the outsider art field, the insights of which will help deepen our understanding of the social-cultural environment from which many remarkable creations by self-taught artists of the American South have emerged. * Raw Vision * Walks isn't merely a showcase for "Way Out People Way Out There," but a living testimony of those who will always be drawn toward the raw imagination's anti-commercial hinterland-even if it happens to reside in a concrete caveman outside a filling station. -- J.W. McCormack * BOMB * Along with a deep sense of religious wonder, there is a sense of urgency to the work featured in Walks to the Paradise Garden, a compulsion to make more and more of it until it covered the walls of their homes, crowded the hallways, and spilled onto the front lawn. -- Will Matsuda * Topic * The photographs, in these instances, offer crucial insights into the spiritual wellsprings of their aesthetic approaches and their artistic practice. -- James Balestrieri * Antiques and the Arts Weekly * The photographs, in these instances, offer crucial insights into the spiritual wellsprings of their aesthetic approaches and their artistic practice. -- James Balestrieri * Antiques and The Arts Weekly * The book itself is both a substantive document and, in our no-attention-span Instagram era, a surprisingly performative one, too. Williams language makes each entry a tease. As a prospector with a keen eye and a storyteller itching to please, he seemed determined to dig up something new with each encounter. -- Edward M. Gómez * Hyperallergic * Walks highlights images and stories of Southern artists and creators while they were still anonymous, before they were famous, or in some cases, infamous. * Ace Weekly * This book is a delight, especially when you think it almost wasnt published. Williams prose is as way-out as the artists, and he creatively and sometimes profanely chronicled his travels to find them. At its heart, though, this is a book of amazing photographs as unforgettable as their subjects proud Southern individualists for whom creating art was as much a part of life as breathing. -- Tom Eblen * Lexington Herald Leader * Tobie Mathews magnificent book testifies to Russias unrepeatable two years of free-ranging political satire. -- Donald Rayfield * Literary Review *

Acknowledgements 11(4)
Editor's Note 15(2)
The Map Of Kentucky And Its Litany Of Glorifications 17(2)
A Preamble 19(6)
Some Savory Gists 25(4)
The Man of Visions!
29(6)
Mirell Lainhart
35(4)
"History's Most Significant Man"
39(4)
The Red, While & Blue Man of Dry Valley Road
43(4)
Jolly Joshua Samuel's "Can City"
47(4)
Convenience Store Sign: Travelers Rest, South Carolina
51(2)
The Reverend John D. Ruth's Drive-Through Bible Park
53(2)
Eddie Martin
55(6)
The Still Almost Unknown Leroy Person
61(4)
Herman Bridgers (Bridges, Bridgets)
65(2)
Reuben A. Miller
67(2)
J.T. "Jake" McCord, of Thomson, Georgia
69(2)
Ralph Griffin, "The Root Man"
71(4)
Thomas Samuel Doyle
75(6)
James Harold Jennings
81(6)
Tiresomely Demanding Phallic Signposts
87(2)
John Benjamin ("J.B.") Murray
89(2)
Convenience Store Sign: Beans Creek, Tennessee
91(2)
"Jungle Boy" Jones' Haw River Animal Crossing at Bynum
93(4)
Noah and Charley Kinney, of Toller Holler
97(4)
The Rev. McKendree Robbins Long
101(2)
Churchill Winston Hill
103(2)
"Keep Out Here Crazy Bastards Whoremongers"
105(2)
Buck's Bait Shop, Athens, Georgia
107(2)
"Home on the Range" in Delta, Kentucky
109(2)
Martha Nelson and the Re-Invention ofthe Doll Baby
111(12)
The Wooldridge Monuments: Maylield, Kentucky
123(2)
Descriptions from "This Diary of "My Art Work"
125(6)
Zebedee A., Zebedee B., Zebedee C, Etc
131(2)
"I Never Cot a Penny Back"
133(2)
"Be Kindly Affectioned One to Another"
135(2)
The Amazing Wind Machines of Vollis Simpson
137(6)
Edgar Tolson
143(4)
Who Is Sister Gertrude Morgan?
147(4)
"The Beaver from Jupiter"
151(2)
Alabama Unbound
153(2)
In the Trees on a Hill North of the Birmingham Airport
155(4)
Henry Dorsey, Prodigalsonalicesboy
159(4)
"Cowboy Steve" Taylor
163(2)
Convenience Store Sign: Loafers Glory, North Carolina
165(2)
The Indomitable Georgia Blizzard
167(6)
The True, Only, and Most Secret Entrance to Hog Heaven
173(4)
Woodrow Gantt
177(2)
"Mrs. Pope's Museum"
179(2)
A Quilt of Georgia Places
181(2)
Mr. Eldren M. Bailey
183(4)
Arliss Watford of Winton, NC
187(2)
Sycamore City
189(2)
Across the Kudzu
191(20)
Raymond Coins
211(2)
"Collect Folk Art for Fun and Profit"
213(2)
From the Mississippi Mud
215(2)
"Butt's Dreamhouse"
217(4)
William C. Owens of Poplar Branch
221(2)
Jeff Williams
223(2)
Austin G. Sutton, Trickster
225(2)
Captain Kentucky!
227(2)
Yard Sign, Kilmichael, Mississippi
229(2)
The One and Nearly Only Bradley Harrison Picklesimer
231(2)
Kentucky Ernie Ford, the Other One
233(2)
Ralph Eugene Meatyard's Farewell Performance
235(2)
Carvinga Few Pine Lines with Carl McKenzie
237(2)
With Old Man Denzil Goodpaster
239(2)
Vernon Burwell
241(6)
"Aunt Met" Brooks'Place, Out on the Walhalla Road
247(2)
"A Blessing from the Source": The Annie Hooper Bequest
249(14)
A Little Visit with Miles Burkholder Carpenter
263(4)
The Garden of Ancient Buildings
267(4)
Mene, Mene, Tekel, Upharsin! Says Minnie
271(2)
Minnie Black's Special Memorial Gourd
273(2)
The Pastor of Happy Valley
275(2)
The Garden of Banner Blevins
277(4)
George Eure, Sculptor, Como, North Carolina
281(2)
The Tomb of J. Gordon Coogler
283(2)
Nude Driver Threw Lard
285(2)
Carlton Elonzo Garrett, of Flowery Branch
287(2)
Towns of Tennessee
289(2)
"The Early Worm Box"
291(2)
Frank Heller
Retired Orderly, "Sweet Evening Breeze," Dies
293(2)
The Art Man & the Wizards
295(22)
The Yadkin Valley Eidolon
317(2)
Excerpts from "Trace Chats"
319(2)
Dilmus Hall
321(4)
Thornton Dial Talks about "Every Face in America"
325(4)
Little Enis: "180 Pounds of Dynamite, with a9-Inch Fuse!"
329(4)
Way Out There
333(10)
Index Of Photographs
343