Peter Selz
Nathan Oliveira
262 pages, 8-1/2 x 11 inches, 108 color illustrations, 74 b/w photographs
March 2002, Available worldwide
Categories: Art; Art History; California & the West
March 2002, Available worldwide
Categories: Art; Art History; California & the West
Exhibition Dates:
San Jose Museum of Art, San Jose, California, February 8-May 12, 2002
Neuberger Museum of Art, Purchase College, SUNY, Purchase, New York, June 16-September 8, 2002
Palm Springs Desert Museum, Palm Springs, California, October 5, 2002-January 5, 2003
Orange County Museum of Art, Newport Beach, California, April 5-June 15, 2003
Tacoma Art Museum, Tacoma, Washington, July-November, 2003
San Jose Museum of Art, San Jose, California, February 8-May 12, 2002
Neuberger Museum of Art, Purchase College, SUNY, Purchase, New York, June 16-September 8, 2002
Palm Springs Desert Museum, Palm Springs, California, October 5, 2002-January 5, 2003
Orange County Museum of Art, Newport Beach, California, April 5-June 15, 2003
Tacoma Art Museum, Tacoma, Washington, July-November, 2003
"Selz firmly places Oliveira within the context of the cultural fabric of the 1950s, when the painter began his career, and reveals his various influences. A chronology, bibliography, and list of Oliveira's solo exhibitions make this the definitive monograph to date."—Library Journal
"Nathan Oliveira casts a serious eye and gives a balanced account both of the California milieu in which Oliveira was formed and the artist himself. It is an authentic contribution to art history and a much-needed exploration of the rich culture of California art."—Dore Ashton, Professor of Art History, The Cooper Union for the Advancement of Science and Art
"Peter Selz and Joann Moser have produced an important study of the career and work of Oliveira, a stubbornly individual artist who, heedless of the clamor of the ideologies and the lure of the market, has resolutely gone his own way, these past fifty years, as painter, printmaker, and sculptor."—Lorenz Eitner, Osgood Hooker Professor of Fine Arts, Emeritus, Stanford University
"Peter Selz, the expert art historian, has written a well-researched and passionate study of the painter and printmaker Nathan Oliveira. This fine book, illustrated by more than 200 examples of the artist's innovative work, confirms Oliveira's place in the front rank of American artists."—James Schevill, Poet and author of The American Fantasies
"Nathan Oliveira is one of the leading figures of his generation as a painter, printmaker, and re-discoverer of monotype, and a comprehensive gathering and discussion of his work has been needed for some time. Peter Selz has brought forth just the book that was needed—touching on formative influences, friendships and teaching stints, throughout his career, and the parallel surges and fallow periods in all media of his work. The remarkable momentum of the artist's career in printmaking and monotype is also traced separately by Joann Moser."—Gerald Nordland, author of Richard Diebenkorn
"Peter Selz and Joann Moser have produced an important study of the career and work of Oliveira, a stubbornly individual artist who, heedless of the clamor of the ideologies and the lure of the market, has resolutely gone his own way, these past fifty years, as painter, printmaker, and sculptor."—Lorenz Eitner, Osgood Hooker Professor of Fine Arts, Emeritus, Stanford University
"Peter Selz, the expert art historian, has written a well-researched and passionate study of the painter and printmaker Nathan Oliveira. This fine book, illustrated by more than 200 examples of the artist's innovative work, confirms Oliveira's place in the front rank of American artists."—James Schevill, Poet and author of The American Fantasies
"Nathan Oliveira is one of the leading figures of his generation as a painter, printmaker, and re-discoverer of monotype, and a comprehensive gathering and discussion of his work has been needed for some time. Peter Selz has brought forth just the book that was needed—touching on formative influences, friendships and teaching stints, throughout his career, and the parallel surges and fallow periods in all media of his work. The remarkable momentum of the artist's career in printmaking and monotype is also traced separately by Joann Moser."—Gerald Nordland, author of Richard Diebenkorn
Nathan Oliveira's passion for continuing an inner-directed artistic tradition attached to the human subject has persisted throughout his more than forty years as a painter and master printmaker. His art represents an ongoing dialogue with artists from Rembrandt to Goya to Munch, Beckmann, Giacometti, and de Kooning--whom he recognizes for their insights into the human condition. The human touch, so often absent in contemporary work, is distinct in Oliveira's art. His paintings and monotypes bear the mark of his brush in the tactile quality of the paint and the unique printed surfaces of his monotypes. Active in the San Francisco Bay Area, where he is professor emeritus of art at Stanford University, Oliveira is widely regarded as a key figure in American art, and his paintings, monoprints, drawings, watercolors, and sculpture have attracted an international audience. This book is the most comprehensive study to date of Oliveira's career as artist and teacher. Generously illustrated with 172 images, more than 100 in color, and including valuable, previously unpublished biographical and bibliographical information, Nathan Oliveira will accompany the major traveling exhibition of the same name.
Peter Selz's authoritative text weaves key moments in Oliveira's professional life together with compelling readings of the paintings themselves. Selz, who curated the exhibition, succeeds brilliantly in establishing a sense of where Oliveira came from, what inspired him, and how he thought of himself as an artist. Selz discusses Oliveira's beginnings as the son of Portuguese immigrants, his early exposure to Bay Area artists, and his formative experience of studying with Max Beckmann. Selz also traces the artist's affinity to his older contemporaries, his search for an expressive relationship between form and space that found resonance in presentation of the single figure, and the exhibitions and collaborations that shaped his career.
Susan Landauer's introduction provides an overview of the artist's work, while Joann Moser considers Oliveira's prints and drawings. Gary Carson's chronology, bibliography, and list of Oliveira's solo exhibitions complete this landmark publication, which fills an important gap in bringing Oliveira's powerful paintings and prints to the attention of a much larger public.
Peter Selz's authoritative text weaves key moments in Oliveira's professional life together with compelling readings of the paintings themselves. Selz, who curated the exhibition, succeeds brilliantly in establishing a sense of where Oliveira came from, what inspired him, and how he thought of himself as an artist. Selz discusses Oliveira's beginnings as the son of Portuguese immigrants, his early exposure to Bay Area artists, and his formative experience of studying with Max Beckmann. Selz also traces the artist's affinity to his older contemporaries, his search for an expressive relationship between form and space that found resonance in presentation of the single figure, and the exhibitions and collaborations that shaped his career.
Susan Landauer's introduction provides an overview of the artist's work, while Joann Moser considers Oliveira's prints and drawings. Gary Carson's chronology, bibliography, and list of Oliveira's solo exhibitions complete this landmark publication, which fills an important gap in bringing Oliveira's powerful paintings and prints to the attention of a much larger public.
Director's Preface
Daniel T. Keegan
Between the Notes: The Art of Nathan Oliveira
Susan Landauer
Nathan Oliveira
Peter Selz
Traditions through Time: A Consideration of Oliveira's Prints
and Monotypes
Joann Moser
Chronology
G.B. Carson'
Selected Exhibitions
G.B. Carson
Bibliography
G.B. Carson
List of Illustrations
Index
Daniel T. Keegan
Between the Notes: The Art of Nathan Oliveira
Susan Landauer
Nathan Oliveira
Peter Selz
Traditions through Time: A Consideration of Oliveira's Prints
and Monotypes
Joann Moser
Chronology
G.B. Carson'
Selected Exhibitions
G.B. Carson
Bibliography
G.B. Carson
List of Illustrations
Index
The Art of David Ireland: The Way Things Are, by Karen Tsujimoto and Jennifer R. Gross
Jay DeFeo and The Rose, edited by Jane Green and Leah Levy
Elmer Bischoff: The Ethics of Paint, by Susan Landauer
The Art of Joan Brown, by Karen Tsujimoto and Jacquelynn Baas
Society of Six: California Colorists, by Nancy Boas
The San Francisco School of Abstract Expressionism, by Susan Landauer
Bay Area Figurative Art: 1950-1965, by Caroline A. Jones
Art in the San Francisco Bay Area, 1945-1980: An Illustrated History, by Thomas Albright
Jay DeFeo and The Rose, edited by Jane Green and Leah Levy
Elmer Bischoff: The Ethics of Paint, by Susan Landauer
The Art of Joan Brown, by Karen Tsujimoto and Jacquelynn Baas
Society of Six: California Colorists, by Nancy Boas
The San Francisco School of Abstract Expressionism, by Susan Landauer
Bay Area Figurative Art: 1950-1965, by Caroline A. Jones
Art in the San Francisco Bay Area, 1945-1980: An Illustrated History, by Thomas Albright














