In the years following his controversial 1970 exhibition at the Marlborough Galleries, Philip Guston was generally viewed as yesterday’s scandal, a maverick who had abandoned abstract expressionism and, with it, the adulation of the art world. Few paid serious attention to the disturbing, profound work he was producing in his Woodstock studio. So when Ross Feld, a young novelist and critic, wrote a penetrating review of Guston’s latest show, the artist sent him a letter of appreciation: “I f…
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AwardsPrint BooksArt, Architecture & PhotographyBiographyPaperbackNonfictionArt - History & CriticismArtists, Architects & Photographers - BiographyArt of the AmericasArt Styles & PeriodsGeneral & Miscellaneous American ArtModern ArtArtists - BiographyAbstract Expressionism & Art of the 1950sPublishers Weekly's Best Nonfiction of 2003Best Books of the Year 2003Best Books of the YearPublishers Weekly's Best Books of the Year 2003



