Product Description
California has long nourished artists of all kinds: architect Frank Gehry, artist Judy Chicago, musician Don Henley, writer Larry Gelbart, cartoonist Matt Groening, sculptor Robert Graham, actress Carol Burnett, novelist John Rechy, composer George Winston, muralist Judith Baca, producer Norman Lear, choreographer Bella Lewitzky, screenwriter Robert Towne. Some, like novelist Carolyn See, conductor Michael Tilson Thomas, songwriter Randy Newman, artist Alexis Smith, and playwright David Henry Hwang, were born in California, but others came from afar for the light, space, natural beauty, and opportunity. With its frontier history and tradition of embracing experimentation, the Golden State encourages creative freedom unlike any other place in America. State of the Arts is the first book to examine and celebrate this phenomenon. Award-winning arts writer Barbara Isenberg has interviewed more than fifty prominent painters, writers, composers, architects, directors, and performers about how they became artists and how living in California influences their work. Talking about then and now, public history and personal memory, they offer a kaleidoscopic view of the many ways that environment affects and nurtures the creative process. Chronicling their reflections--from Dave Brubeck's childhood on a Concord ranch to Clint Eastwood's first memories of his beloved Carmel, from Luis Valdez's farmworkers' theater to Maxine Hong Kingston's writing of Chinese myth, from Joan Didion's tales of Sacramento to David Hockney's paintings of the Hollywood Hills--these wide-ranging and revealing conversations illuminate creative life in the land of plenty.
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Golden State
Rating (5)
Date: 2000-11-06
9 out of 9 customers found this reveiw helpful
This is a wonderful book about the most complicated state in America, California. The voices representing it are diverse, and strong, and a picture emerges of the Golden State that is as rich and varied as the State itself. David Hockney has been profoundly influenced by the lavish spectacle of this sun-splashed state. Carolyn See illuminates with her incisive, uniquely wry voice. John Rechy's take on the physicality and spirituality of a profound Los Angeles is worth the price of the book. Even those who have abandoned it--lots of rationalizations about that--are heard, like Joan Didion and her husband, who long for the state they left, substituting the sun and the easy, exhibitionistic narcissism for the hard-core reality of New York. There's a wealth of fresh observations, like Luis Valdez's, and there's even a typically laconic entry from Clint Eastwood, who is--surprise, surprise--not entirely profound. But overall the voices are strong, assertive--and, indeed, the Golden state emerges as a powerful state of the creative arts, original artists commendably impossible to label.
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