The Art of Symeon Shimin

Author:   Tonia Shimin ,  Symeon Shimin ,  Josef Woodard ,  Charles Donelan
Publisher:   Mercury Press International
ISBN:  

9780999034224


Pages:   156
Publication Date:   01 November 2019
Format:   Hardback
Availability:   In stock   Availability explained
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The Art of Symeon Shimin


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Overview

The Art of Symeon Shimin With text from Symeon Shimin, Edited and Curated by Tonia Shimin From Hollywood to Beloved Children’s Book Illustrator to  Muralist and Painter of Justice, Symeon Shimin Left His Mark and a Legacy that Resonates Today  The Art of Symeon Shimin presents a striking collection of the fine art of this exceptional Russian born Jewish artist. Curated by the artist's daughter, it is the first collection and overview of Shimin’s work. Including an autobiography by the artist, essays by noted arts journalists Josef Woodard and Charles Donelan, over 100 plates and archival photographs, this book showcases art of rare beauty and raw expression.Recognized as an award winning illustrator of 57 children’s books, two of his own authoring, Shimin, 1902-1984, was also one of the most highly regarded artists creating posters for Hollywood films, including the original poster for Gone With the Wind and the 40 ft. canvas for Solomon and Sheba. Most notably he was acclaimed for his masterpiece, the mural Contemporary Justice and the Child, commissioned in 1936-1940, by the PWAP, Public Works Arts Project, for the Department of Justice Building, Washington, DC, where it stands today. Chaim Gross stated in 1973, “Shimin is a painter who knows the craft of drawing and painting which in his hands becomes great art.” With paintings held in collections including the Chrysler Museum of Art, this is the first complete collection of his fine art. We are proud to announce that The Art of Symeon Shimin has been awarded:★The Independent Press Awards named The Art of Symeon Shimin the Distinguished Favorite for Fine Arts, 2020.★Winner of 2020 NYC Big Book Award in Arts and Entertainment★Winner of The 2021 Book Excellence Award for Art★Winner Pinnacle Book Achievement Award from National Association of Book Entrepreneurs (NABE)★The 2021 Eric Hoffer Honorary Mention Award for Art.★ 2021 Next Generation Indie Book Awards Finalist. Art★ 2021 IPPY Award Winner Bronze Medal Award for Fine Art★ 2022 First Prize Art Book, North Street Book Prize ★ 2022 Maincrest Book Award ""This coffee-table style volume (9.6 x 0.7 x 11.7 inches) is an impressively informative presentation that clearly and effectively showcases the life and work of one of the 20th Century's most gifted artists -- and should be considered an essential and core addition to personal, professional, community, college, and university fine arts collections.""—Midwest Book Review “Symeon Shimin was a vessel for the unheard voices of his time. Those who were shunned, he highlighted; for those who were unseen, he provided a stage. He saw the common man for what he was – beautiful, exceptional, and equal.” -Lauren Kinsley, Research Editor -- Tonia Shimin

Full Product Details

Author:   Tonia Shimin ,  Symeon Shimin ,  Josef Woodard ,  Charles Donelan
Publisher:   Mercury Press International
Imprint:   Mercury Press International
Dimensions:   Width: 24.10cm , Height: 1.90cm , Length: 29.20cm
Weight:   1.238kg
ISBN:  

9780999034224


ISBN 10:   0999034227
Pages:   156
Publication Date:   01 November 2019
Audience:   General/trade ,  General
Format:   Hardback
Publisher's Status:   Active
Availability:   In stock   Availability explained
We have confirmation that this item is in stock with the supplier. It will be ordered in for you and dispatched immediately.

Table of Contents

Reviews

A social realist. -- Time Magazine As we seek to understand and express the value and significance of human experience as such, there will be a place for artists such as Shimin. -- Sam Ben-Meir Shimin was a vessel for the unheard voices of his time. Those who were shunned, he highlighted; for those who were unseen, he provided a stage. He saw the common man for what he was -beautiful, exceptional, and equal. -- Lauren Kinsley, Research Editor The incomparable emotion of Shimin's drawings and paintings are on full display in this beautiful collection. Humanity is the subject, presented in humble iconic imagery and complex gestures alive with every turn of the page. -- Eric Hoffer Awards Editor Tonia Shimin assembles essays and images that span the rich career of her late father, the painter Symeon Shimin. The book's opening section is a brief autobiographical essay that Symeon Shimin wrote before his death in 1984. In it, he spends little time on the subject of painting, focusing instead on his family life. He was born in Astrakhan, Russia, in 1902 and wanted to be a musician as a child; he idolized his uncle Eli, who was a composer. In 1912, the family moved to New York City. As he pursued his art, representational drawing came to him easily, and his first studies were on paper bags from his father's new delicatessen. The second essay, by critic Josef Woodard, provides a fine portrait of Shimin's artistic life and takes time to appreciate the artist's illustrations for movie posters and children's books. But to Woodard, these finely executed projects prevented Shimin from pursuing more worthwhile works like his Contemporary Justice and the Child, a landmark mural in the U.S. Department of Justice building. In the final essay, arts journalist Charles Donelan fastidiously moves through Shimin's oeuvre, presenting a notion of the artist as a passionate observer and humanist whose representational paintings were underappreciated when abstract works dominated art markets. Together, the three essays achieve an edifying balance with Shimin's intimate reflection, Woodard's steady survey, and Donelan's academic appreciation. The rest of the book consists of reproductions, ably arranged to showcase Shimin's virtuosity and beautifully highlight his career-spanning fascination with the human form. The reprints of studies for Contemporary Justice are a highlight, revealing the minute strokes of brilliance that contributed to a coherent whole. A glowing reprint of Shimin's later painting The Pack shows the artist's knack for chaotic ensemble, as does Discussion Group (I), reprinted across two facing pages. In her acknowledgments, Tonia Shimin says that she intended the book as a tribute to the work of my father ; it is, and it also underscores the skills of its editor. A loving survey of an artist's varied career. -- KIRKUS REVIEWS His name will mean something in the long history of painting. -- The Architectural Forum This coffee-table style volume is an impressively informative presentation that clearly and effectively showcases the life and work of one of the 20th Century's most gifted artists -- and should be considered an essential and core addition to personal, professional, community, college, and university fine arts collections. -- The Midwest Book Review


Symeon Shimin was a vessel for the unheard voices of his time. Those who were shunned, he highlighted; for those who were unseen, he provided a stage. He saw the common man for what he was - beautiful, exceptional, and equal. -- Lauren Kinsley Research Editor


Author Information

As a dancer Tonia Shimin performed in the companies of Martha Graham, Jose Limón, Pearl Lang, The Ypsilanti Greek Theater and as a soloist with Anna Sokolow's Player's Project, Mary Anthony Dance Theater and Repertory West Dance Company. She has had an extensive teaching career in the United States and abroad. Her choreographic works have appeared in the United States, the Czech Republic, Russia, Germany, Turkey, Switzerland, Greece, Italy and Mexico.  An award winning dance filmmaker, for among others the documentary Mary Anthony: A life in Modern Dance, her awards have included support from the National Endowment for the Arts and the 2005 Lifetime Achievement Award from the Santa Barbara Dance Alliance. Currently she is Professor Emerita of the Department of Theater Dance at the University of California, Santa Barbara and continues her creative work in the USA and abroad. Most recently she has curated, edited and with Mercury Press International published the award winning book, The Art of Symeon Shimin, on the remarkable work of her father, whose fine art is here shown in a collection for the first time. Symeon Shimin was born in Astrakhan, Russia, on the Caspian Sea, in 1902. His family immigrated to the United States ten years later, living in two small rooms behind their delicatessen. Already interested in drawing for a living, Shimin apprenticed himself to a commercial artist at age 16 to help support his family. He attended art classes at Cooper Union Art School at night and briefly at the studio of George Luks.  Primarily self-taught, as a young artist he studied the works of the master artists spending time in Spain, France and Mexico. Later trips to Italy proved to be inspirational for him and his work.  In 1936 he was awarded a contract by the PWAP, Public Works Arts Project, to paint the mural “Contemporary Justice and the Child,“ for the Department of Justice Building, Washington, DC, which won wide acclaim. Taking four years to complete it can still be seen today. His paintings have been exhibited by the Whitney Museum in New York and many other museums throughout the United States. Shimin’s work in children's books began in 1950 and he subsequently became a greatly respected illustrator of more than 50 books for children, including two that he also authored.   Among other work early in his career, Shimin painted large-scale murals for Hollywood films, creating the original poster for “Gone with the Wind.” He died in New York in 1984.  Joe Woodard is an arts journalist-critic for among other journals, The Santa Barbara Independent. He is a musician and  VP for the  record company (Household Ink Records). Skilled in music, film and art criticism, arts journalism and interviewing (for newspapers, magazines, books, social media and blogging), music composition and performance. As a veteran, active musician he is a songwriter, guitarist, singer involved in various bands, and recording for the independent, Santa Barbara-based Household Ink Records, founded in 1987 and with 41 titles as of 2020. Woodard's current projects include Headless Household, flapping, Flapping, his solo artist persona, Dudley and others. (www.householdink.com). Charles Donelan has been writing about theater, music, dance, education, and the visual arts in Santa Barbara since 2002. He has served as the executive arts editor at the Santa Barbara Independent since 2004. From 2017-20, he created weekly segments on arts and entertainment events in Santa Barbara for KCRW radio. In 2021 he was a finalist for the Andy Warhol Foundation Arts Writers grant. As an educator, Donelan taught at Laguna Blanca School from 2004-21 and the UCSB Writing Program from 2001-04. He holds degrees from Yale (B.A.) and Columbia (Ph.D., english and comparative literature). He published the book “Romanticism and Male Fantasy in Lord Byron’s Don Juan: A Marketable Vice” (Macmillan/St. Martins) in 2000. Presently he is the Senior Writer/ Publicist for Arts & Lectures at the University of California, Santa Barbara.

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