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Scandals, Vandals, and da Vincis

A Gallery of Remarkable Art Tales

ebook
1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available
The secret histories of the world’s most famous masterpieces
Caravaggios, Rembrandts, Monets—the works of immortal artists such as these are indelibly imprinted in the public mind; they are priceless masterpieces whose beauty, artistry, and emotional impact have inspired admiration, awe, and envy through the centuries. Yet behind many of these brilliant paintings and sculptures are fascinating, unique histories.
In Scandals, Vandals, and da Vincis, award-winning writer Harvey Rachlin relates in exciting detail how nearly thirty of these works came to be created and how they survived burglary, forgery, revolutions, ransoms, vandals, scandals, religious sects, and shipwrecks to eventually come to their current resting places
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    • Publisher's Weekly

      April 2, 2007
      Readers may find an entirely new appreciation for art and its creators after reading Rachlin's dishy tales of the people behind and beyond 26 famous canvases. Using Caraveggio's David with the Head of Goliath, Rachlin explores how an artist might "deal on canvas with his own emotional crisis," in this case the years Caravaggio spent as a fugitive following a victorious (but deadly) duel. In A Convalescent, a painting by artist James Tissot, Rachlin sees an artist "unwittingly predicting on canvas the strange circumstances that...befall him many years later," a story of love, death and the supernatural. And using the Mona Lisa, Rachlin deconstructs the perfect crime: the masterpiece's 1911 heist from the Louvre. The only problem with this fun title are the black and white painting reproductions, which make Rachlin's frequently hyper-detailed descriptions a bit frustrating. Still, it's an entertaining read full of good, gossipy tales for art aficionados or those interested in sounding like one.

    • Library Journal

      March 15, 2007
      In this book of art gossip and intrigue, Rachlin ("Lucy's Bones, Sacred Stones, and Einstein's Brain") writes that for him, "the past is an obsession." Here, he provides breezy and sometimes riveting accounts of 26 famous paintings. All of these paintings and some of their histories are well known in the art world, although a few stories appear to be told publicly for the first time. Rachlin begins with the "Mona Lisa", the world's most famous painting, then goes on to cover Gilbert Stuart's "Athenaeum Head of George Washington", the world's most reproduced image (on the $1 bill), before ending with Dali's enigmatic "Christ of Saint John of the Cross". Each story is introduced with a theme statement, which is often pedantic. Some of the stories, short as they are, are augmented with rhetorical questions, moralizing, and cliché s, features that make the book most appropriate for adolescents with a budding interest in history or art history.Ilene Skeen, Hunter Coll., New York

      Copyright 2007 Library Journal, LLC Used with permission.

    • Booklist

      March 1, 2007
      Great paintings often have great backstories, and in this lively, gossipy book, prolific Rachlin takes full advantage, amping up the drama in these mostly familiar art controversies. There isn't much serious criticism here; instead he takes an almost pulp-fictional approach to tales of art theft, vandalism, public trials, and private inspirations. We learn about the burglary of Leonardo's " Mona Lisa" from the Louvre in 1911, followed by its bizarre recovery two years later; three separate attacks (by vandals wielding knifes and sulfuric acid) on Rembrandt's " The Night Watch"; and the flight of the outlaw Caravaggio and how his troubles might have influenced his " David with the Head of Goliath." Best of all, Rachlin follows the line "whatever happened to . . .," as in the case of John Singleton Copley's " Watson and the Shark." The real-life subject of the painting's depiction of a boy on the verge of having his leg bitten off survived his ordeal and went on to become a Revolutionary War-era American hater and English nobleman, despite his peg leg.(Reprinted with permission of Booklist, copyright 2007, American Library Association.)

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  • English

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