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Food in Painting

From the Renaissance to the Present

By (author) Kenneth Bendiner
Format: Hardback
Publisher: Reaktion Books, London, United Kingdom
Published: 1st Oct 2004
Dimensions: w 190mm h 250mm d 22mm
Weight: 985g
ISBN-10: 1861892136
ISBN-13: 9781861892133
Barcode No: 9781861892133
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Synopsis
"Food in Painting" is a sumptuous exploration of food images in European and American painting from the early Renaissance to the present. Kenneth Bendiner sees such images as a separate classification of art, with its own history, and offers novel reconsiderations of famous works by the likes of Bruegel, Rembrandt, Chardin, Manet and Warhol, and some intriguing paintings by less well-known artists, such as Adriaen Coorte and Peter Blume. The book underlines the central importance of sixteenth century innovations in food subjects, and the great influence of seventeenth century Dutch food paintings in the development of food imagery. It covers aphrodisiacs, bottled water, menus, anti-social eating scenes, dogs in the dining room and many other visual representations relating to food. It also deals with images of food that are purely symbolic, the sexual references of Surrealist food art, and food as a marginal element in allegories, showing the optimistic, human-centred, Renaissance spirit of food, and the way abundance, success and fulfilment pervade this art. Drawing together two attractive and engrossing subjects eating and handsome paintings Bendiner offers up a tempting and irresistible feast of facts and images. Those who want to learn about the history of food, as recorded in images, will find the book rewarding. And those who wonder what Bruegel's peasants are eating, or why Chardin decorated a brioche with an orange blossom, will find their understanding of art history enriched.

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Food in Painting loads its table with good things to see. The analysis is shrewd; the commentaries incisive; the illustrations - except when satire or sermon appears on the painter's menu - suitably mouth-watering. Bendiner shows the variety of symbolic flavours in food-themed art. However, unlike many art historians, he's not so blinded by symbolism that he fails to savour all the evidence about changes in diet, cooking and taste. A visual and mental feast. The Independent ... an intriguing and provocative study ... Reading Bendiner's book leaves one with the general tools to consider images of food in Western art from the Renaissance to the present in relation to one another, resulting in a rewarding game for the reader/viewer and a refreshing contribution to the field of art history. Gastronomica Totally refreshing and a pleasure to read ... an extraordinary contribution. -- Robert Rosenblum