The Complete Operas of Richard Wagner

Charles Osborne

Wagner, the man and his music, are known for the passionate feelings, both positive and negative, which they inspire. One of the best single volumes from among the vast plethora of writing about Wagner, The Complete Operas of Richard Wagner provides detailed synopses, musical analyses, and liberal quotations from Wagner’s extensive writings and those of his contemporaries (including Franz Liszt, Edvard Grieg, and King Ludwig II, of Bavaria), and places each of Wagner’s 13 operas within a greater biographical and historical context. The Complete Operas of Richard Wagner vividly portrays both the creator and his creations with a level of objectivity often missing from other works about a man whose immense talent may have only been matched by his ego. JAT

Publisher: Da Capo
Paperback: 288 pages
Illustrated

My Life

Richard Wagner

A complete and authentic edition based on the manuscript was not published until 1963. Memoirs from Wagner’s birth in 1813 to 1864, a mid-career point where many of his greatest operas had yet to be written and the founding of Bayreuth was but a dream. As this accunt was composed principally for his wife Cosima and patron King Ludwig’s benefit, Wagner downplays the importance of past romantic liaisons and the value of career assistance received prior to Ludwig’s patronage: yet unflattering material in the memoir raises questions as to whether the memoir was in fact the malicious fabrication of his enemies. My Life has the feel of a lengthy and incredible oral saga spun by a master dramatist. JAT

Publisher: Da Capo
Paperback: 802 pages

Penetrating Wagner’s Ring: An Anthology

Edited by John Louis DiGaetani

The Ring of the Niebelung has proved to be one of the most enduring of operatic spectacles. This book presents the writings of such noted exports as Robert Donington, Ernest Newman, Andrew Porter and Sir Georg Solti encompassing a broad range of thought and viewpoints. An excellent, annotated bibliography, an annotated discography, and a Ring chronology are also included. JAT

Publisher: Da Capo
Paperback: 458 pages
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Wagner on Music and Drama

Albert Goldman and Evert Sprinchorn

Culled from Wagner’s prose writings, this text condenses the master’s writings to a single volume of approximately 400 pages, arranged into eight major subdivisions. The editors manage to make Wagner’s thoughts both accessible and coherent while faithfully reflecting his intentions. “Art was his religion and the theater its temple. Moral and spiritual values existed for him only insofar as his art might benefit from them.” JAT

Publisher: Da Capo
Paperback: 448 pages

Apollinaire on Art: Essays and Reviews, 1902-1918

Edited by Leroy C. Breunig

The most influential poet of his generation and inventor of the word surrealism, Guillaume Apollinaire (1880-1918) was the champion of modern art and the impresario of the avant-garde. Matisse, Picasso and Braque—today all recognized as modern masters—are just three of the painters for whom this “poet-critic” was the most ardent (and for a time, almost single-handed) defender. In reading the essays, it’s remarkable to note that his knowledge of painting and sculpture was almost entirely self-taught. Passionate, lyrical and fiercely subjective (and at points, to his detriment, breezy and vague—anathema to rigorous intellectual analysis and dry academic critique)—Apollinaire possessed the most important trait that marks the true critic: prescience, the ability to recognize genius. Of Picasso, whom he considered without question the greatest artist of his generation, he wrote: “His naturalism, with its fondness for precision, is accompanied by that mysticism that in Spain inhabits the least religious of souls.” MDG

Publisher: Da Capo
Paperback: 546 pages
Illustrated

The Dark Side of the Screen: Film Noir

Foster Hirsch

“Film noir is a term used to describe the dark, brooding, doom-laden films that emerged from Hollywood after World War II. Double Indemnity, The Big Sleep, Pickup on South Street, Kiss Me Deadly, Sunset Boulevard, The Killers, High Sierra—these were just a few of the hundreds that appeared during the postwar decade, all of them registering a more cruel, disoriented, heartless vision, of America than had ever appeared before… The most thorough and entertaining study of the themes, visual motifs, character types, actors, directors and films in this genre ever published. From Billy Wilder, Douglas Sirk, Robert Aldrich and Howard Hawkes to Martin Scorsese, Roman Polanski and Paul Schrader, the noir themes of dread, paranoia, steamy sex, double-crossing women and menacing cityscapes have held a fascination.”

Publisher: Da Capo
Paperback: 229 pages
Illustrated

Dialogues with Marcel Duchamp

Pierre Cabanne

The author must have been highly respected and trusted by Marcel Duchamp because this series of coversations between two learned and mild men in 1966, two years before Duchamp’s death, are unexpectedly warm, open and relaxed. Despite the many marvelous books reviewed throughout this sourcebook, I am going to maintain that every reader should do everything possible to acquire a copy of Dialogues With Marcel Duchamp as soon as possible. It is really that essential, a sentiment which Duchamp would no doubt deplore on principle.
Marcel Duchamp was selected in one of the few moments of consensus among the bickering and socially feeble Surrealist group as a general mediator. He presided over a group whose chief practice was making, squeezing, honing and pricking conceptual conceits, words and objects until they could pass for disconcertingly comfortable contrivances, things more or less akin to that very art that seemingly froze over its self early in this century, dying in a mire of deceit. Apparence, and appearance sit benignly in a worn, leather armchair blowing out a steady stream of Havana cigar smoke and musing with cynical irony over the possibilities and improbabilities of “deceptual art,” as Brion Gysin once dubbed it.
Upon reflection, this is all rather peculiar and not a little ridiculous. Was Duchamp primarily an armchair critic whose persuasive challenges pushed a pseudo-avant-garde unwittingly and quite fearfully towards a new radicalism disconcertingly beyond painterly concerns and art-historical contexts, and employing surgically logical analyses of method, motive, madness and the absurdity of making any “Thing” with either a small or capital “T”? The impression of Duchamp that emerges from this book is one of an existentialist dandy par excellence whose brilliant brain amused itself in order to alleviate the utter boredom and pointlessness of a shattered Western culture bereft of all style and function, and whose final commentary upon uselessness was to exploit and animate the limits of the intrinsically redundant and meaningless.
So, was Duchamp the seminal imposter of 20th-century art, as many conceptually retarded painters, critics and even dealers with more than a passing vested interest in the merely “retinal” decorations passed off as “art” that Duchamp so wished to terminate with extreme prejudice would have us believe? Duchamp states that he amused himself occasionally by “thing” making, as he would objectively describe it. Money was not his prime directive. In fact, examples are given of his financial disability. Many “things” were made just to give to a friend at a nominal price when they could have been sold through dealers for a far higher price. Surprisingly, throughout his incredibly influential and intellectually colossal life he had only a single “one-man” exhibition in his native France and about four others worldwide.
Duchamp really didn’t give a fuck about established art-world systems of lionization or the accrual of critical esteem. He eked out a frugal living first from librarianship, and later by buying and selling works by Brancusi. He claimed laziness and convenience led him to sell as many of his works as he possibly could to a single patron, collector Walter Arensberg. For Duchamp, minimizing distraction was a preeminent ascetic concern. Throughout his life he sought privacy and was punctilious regarding discretion. He maintained absolute control and discipline in all aspects of his perceptual life, with a level of linguistic and conceptual rigor that remains as extraordinary today as it was to André Breton and Duchamp’s other contemporaries throughout his marvelously inspiring life.
Was he a charlatan? An opportunist? A compelling and ruthlessly effective “art historical” strategist? My personal position would have to be “of course… yes… no… probably… it really does not matter… no… yes.”
Duchamp himself repeatedly claims that all his “things” and ideas are only the result of “an extraordinary curiosity” and a need to alleviate a sophisticated sense of boredom by “amusing” himself. So much the better! His elevation of skepticism to a previously unthinkable level is as contemporary and inspirational as it gets. At one point in this book he tellingly asserts while discussing Surrealism that “There isn’t any existential painting.” Cabanne replies, “It’s a question of behavior,” and dear Duchamp concurs, “That’s it.” The conclusion one could rightly draw after enjoying the twists and turns within this text is that Marcel Duchamp is deflecting us from the inevitable and probably accurate conclusion that he was, and is, the quintessential existentialist painter. Possibly the first and last of his kind, and all the more glorious and vainglorious for it. What is certain is that his clarity of disenchantment and detachment is so utterly compelling and rings so true that his exclusion from any perspective of what has laughingly been dubbed the “history of art” on the grounds of whimsy and sarcasm personified would be an inadmissable omission. He has set us all up forever, redesigned the “game,” reassigned the functions of the pieces and, with disarming charm has put us in a most rigorous and contorted situation of checkmate. GPO

Publisher: Da Capo
Paperback: 136 pages
Illustrated

Fellini on Fellini

Federico Fellini

Begins with Fellini in a sickbed fever dream melting from adult to child, with nuns and priests popping in and out of view, and Fellini profusely flowing back and forth between life and film—just like Amarcord!—a point driven home by the presence of eight photos from Amarcord and one of Fellini making the film. Includes charming stories from most of Fellini’s life, interspersed with 82 manifestoes on his art: lots of circuses and clowns; his wife actress Julietta Masina; breakdown (Toby Dammit); and subsequent recovery to confront the film of his own life in the finale of 8 1/2. “I’ve seen this blessed film of mine. And it’s something like my own nature. And yet…”—Fellini MS

Publisher: Da Capo
Paperback: 182 pages
Illustrated

The Memoirs of Giorgio de Chirico

Giorgio de Chirico

Known to some as the initiator of Surrealism, de Chirico wrote vast memoirs which complement his stunning paintings. With vivid descriptions of Italian tradition, de Chirico relates his life story through his heavy egocentrism and rich imagination, and includes anecdotes about his artistic community. He attacks the Surrealist movement because its practitioners lived comfortably, dressed very well, ate excellent meals washed down with fine wines,” above all they worked as little as possible, or not at all.” De Chirico examines his obsessions and inner conflicts that eventually convinced him of his artistic supremacy. Also included: “The Technique of Painting,” a chronological table, and a bibliography of his writings. OAA

Publisher: Da Capo
Paperback: 278 pages
Illustrated

Naked City

Weegee

“Every morning the night’s ‘catch’ of persons arrested is brought down from the different police stations to Manhattan Police Headquarters where they are booked for their various crimes, fingerprinted and ‘mugged,’ in the rogues’ gallery… and then paraded in the police lineup… where they are questioned by police officials on a platform with a strong light on their faces… as detectives in the darkened room study them… and make mental notes for future reference… The parade never ceases as the ‘Pie’ wagons unload. I’ve photographed every one of importance from gangsters, deflated big-shot racketeers, a president of the N.Y. Stock Exchange, a leader of Tammany Hall and even Father Divine, who kept muttering as he was booked, ‘Peace, brother, peace.’ The men, women and children who commit murders always fascinate me… and I always ask them why they killed… the men claim self defense, the women seem to be in a daze… but as a rule frustrated love and jealousy are the causes… the kids are worried for fear the picture might not make the papers… I will say one thing for the men and women who kill… they are Ladies and Gentlemen… cooperating with me so I will get a good shot of them…”

Publisher: Da Capo
Paperback: 248 pages
Illustrated