From Publishers Weekly
The pleasure of peeking over an artist's shoulder, watching intimate thoughts and random sketches take shape, is one satisfaction to be gained from these sketchbooks. Davis, whose semiabstract paintings are landmarks of modern art, spent extended stays in Gloucester, Mass., in 193233, drawing wharfs and boats. His underlying concern was what makes a good picture, and his answer had to do with how the artist selects accidental combinations from nature, how space is captured and defined. Three original sketchbooks are combined under one cover and reproduced in facsimile down to the most minute details, even to the front-cover label ("Property of Stuart Davis") bearing the artist's signature and handwritten address. These seascapes, interlocking shapes and geometric doodles, accompanied by pages of notes, may be of slight artistic value, but artists, students and scholars will find them of interest. Copyright 1987 Reed Business Information, Inc.
Stuart Davis: Sketchbooks FROM THE PUBLISHER
This book is a compilation of three sketchbooks drawn by Stuart Davis during his extended stay in Gloucester, Massachusetts, in 1932 and 1933. As the three sketchbooks have been combined in one volume and are reproduced in their original size.
FROM THE CRITICS
Publishers Weekly
The pleasure of peeking over an artist's shoulder, watching intimate thoughts and random sketches take shape, is one satisfaction to be gained from these sketchbooks. Davis, whose semiabstract paintings are landmarks of modern art, spent extended stays in Gloucester, Mass., in 193233, drawing wharfs and boats. His underlying concern was what makes a good picture, and his answer had to do with how the artist selects accidental combinations from nature, how space is captured and defined. Three original sketchbooks are combined under one cover and reproduced in facsimile down to the most minute details, even to the front-cover label (``Property of Stuart Davis'') bearing the artist's signature and handwritten address. These seascapes, interlocking shapes and geometric doodles, accompanied by pages of notes, may be of slight artistic value, but artists, students and scholars will find them of interest. (March 25)