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Peter Doig [Gallery Exclusive Slipcase Edition--But Not the Limited Signed Edition with Clamshell Box and Original Print]

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Features a contribution from art historian and critic Richard Shiff, as well as a conversation between Peter Doig and British artist Chris Ofili. This book includes over 60 major paintings of Peter Doig, as well as a comprehensive collection of works on paper.

Hardcover

First published May 1, 2008

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Displaying 1 - 5 of 5 reviews
Profile Image for Peter West.
29 reviews
October 17, 2023
The single-best book covering Peter Doig's art practice for the price point. High quality photos and exactly what you want from a art-forward book-- mainly art photos and little text. Peter Doig is one of my favorite artists, if not the artist I enjoy the most!
Profile Image for Janice Gobey.
16 reviews
June 11, 2020
Loved this monograph of Peter Doig's work - great clear photographs of his work with interesting written essays, highly recommended.
Profile Image for Dana.
14 reviews1 follower
December 31, 2016
Peter Doig's paintings are beautiful and weird. I saw an exhibition a few years ago which left a lasting impression, and they still hold a lot of their presence reproduced in the book.

Peter Doig includes two substantial essays, which have some interesting analytical things to say about Doig’s work. There's also an interview/conversation with the artist. What I found most interesting was the insight into Doig’s creative practice. He works with photographs and film stills: multiple paintings made from one image, paintings composed of a combination of images, a combination of a postcard and a memory. The interference of the photographic medium, effects of overexposure, stills from a low res video all this is worked into the paintings.
Profile Image for Elisa Goudriaan.
Author 4 books40 followers
January 18, 2017
The Fondation Beyeler in Basel was the first museum that paid attention to Peter Doig’s experimental prints, which in my opninion are the strongest and most beautiful works in this catalogue. The conversation between Ulf Küster and Peter Doig adds a lot to the understanding of Doig’s printmaking process. Often, he tells, he uses a mixture of black ink and fine powdered sugar and by purpose he doesn’t clean the plate properly, so that he gets a kind of granular structure, which gives his etchings the enigmatic character they have. I would love to see these etchings one time in a museum somewhere in the world. In the introduction the organizors of the exhibition (in 2014/2015) write that many of the exhibited paintings derive from private collections, so Doig himself was also looking forward to seeing his own paintings back, all together.
Profile Image for Paul H..
868 reviews457 followers
April 2, 2023
So I've spent the last five months systematically working through the history of fine art in all genres (very long review of . . . literally all art TK, for the book that started this journey) -- but now that I'm about two-thirds of the way through, I have to give a shoutout to Peter Doig, who is almost certainly the greatest painter of the past few decades.
Displaying 1 - 5 of 5 reviews

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