The British Artists Series from Tate Publishing provides an affordable
and accessible introduction, in a hardcover format, to some of the
greatest figures in British Art. See abramsbooks.com for the complete
list.
Known for his iconic and vibrant paintings of modern life that
reinvigorated traditional artistic genres such as the still life,
Patrick Caulfield (1936-2005) drew his subject matter more from the
masters of modern art, such as Braque and Gris, than from the consumer
culture that preoccupied his fellow artists. Celebrating the artist's
mastery of color and graphic elegance as well as his wit, this book
offers the chance to reassess his influences and the legacy of his
approach to painting, and its publication coincides with a survey of
Caulfield's work at Tate Britain.
Caulfield favored a reductive, streamlined use of line and the depiction
of everyday objects saturated in color. Introduced to screenprinting by
Richard Hamilton and Chris Prater in 1964, Caulfield consistently used
the medium for his graphic work thereafter. The deceptive simplicity of
his images, perfectly matched by the aesthetic capacities of the
process, is clear throughout the various phases of his printmaking
career.