Hardcover, Published in Jun 2017 by Art Institute of Chicago
Page count: 72
Romanian-born American artist Saul Steinberg (1914–1999) won international acclaim for his inventive, wry representations of the postwar age. His work appeared on the covers and interiors of the New Yorker for nearly six decades, and his drawings, paintings, prints, collages, and sculptures have been exhibited in galleries and museums around the world. With an introduction by cartoonist Chris Ware, this lively book traces Steinberg’s imagery as it evolved over the full scope of his career, celebrating his refusal to distinguish between high and low art. The 59 works included traverse the realms of Steinberg’s world, from the witty black-ink takes on his newly adopted land of 1940s America to the watercolor paintings he made as a mature artist in the late 1980s.Â
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