Journals Log In | Journals Account Info

Books Cart  
Journals Cart  
 
 
SEARCH
  
Browse Books

Valentine's Day Special
Black History Month Sale
Arizona Statehood Sale
Browse Bargain Books


Recent Award Winners
Browse Bestsellers
UNP on Facebook
Jewish Publication Society

JPS

SS12 catalog

Spring/Summer 2012 e-catalog
Download PDF

Unbroken Poetry, Unbroken Poetry, 0967360803, 0-9673608-0-3, 978-0-9673608-0-5, 9780967360805, Text by Anne Trueblood Brodsky Conversations between Enrique Martínez Celaya, Amnon Yariv, and Donald Baechler

Unbroken Poetry
The Work of Enrique Martínez Celaya
Text by Anne Trueblood Brodsky
Conversations between Enrique Martínez Celaya, Amnon Yariv, and Donald Baechler

hardcover
2006. 112 pp.
78 illustrations, including 53 in color
978-0-9673608-0-5
$40.00 t
 

Distributed by the University of Nebraska Press for Whale and Star Press

With rare clarity and restraint, Martínez Celaya explores loss, alienation, foreignness and beauty as well as new ways to think about the art object and the problems it raises. What emerges is a body of work radically concerned with meaning. Loss and its transcendence through consciousness is the pervasive theme in Unbroken Poetry: The Work of Enrique Martínez Celaya. Martínez Celaya's world is revealed through an introspective essay by San Francisco writer and curator, Anne Trueblood Brodzky. Drawing from the artist's sketchbooks, personal interviews with the artist and the works of Martínez Celaya, Brodzky describes his impetus and methods in a conceptual volume of exceptional beauty and voice.

The artist's disciplined joint pursuit of physics and art fuels conversations with New York artist Donald Baechler and Caltech physicist, Amnon Yariv. In Unbroken Poetry, we are invited to stand close to the visions of Enrique Martínez Celaya, not only to observe and empathize with his world but also to acknowledge the images brought forth from our own.

Also of Interest

Beyond Madness
Norman A. Geske


American Quilts in the Modern Age, 1870-1940
Marin F. Hanson


Pioneer Cemeteries
Annette Stott


Imagining the Unimaginable
Aaron J. Cohen