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Book reviews for "Batchelor,_David" sorted by average review score:

For a Future to Be Possible: Commentaries on the Five Mindfulness Trainings
Published in Paperback by Parallax Pr (February, 1998)
Authors: Thich Nhat Hanh, Robert Aitken, Richard Baker, Stephen Batchelor, Patricia Marx Ellsberg, Joan Halifax, Chan Khong, Maxine Hong Kingston, Jack Kornfield, and Annabel Laity
Amazon base price: $11.55
List price: $16.50 (that's 30% off!)
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Excellent guide to implement precepts into daily life
Thich Nhat Hanh has updated the traditional Buddhist precepts in this book. His version goes beyond "do not kill," for example, to be mindful of that we might be killing inadvertently. He makes us aware of the broadness of the precepts and thus encourages us to be more mindful. If we are not mindful, we break the precepts. Therefore, he calls them Mindfulness Trainings. Thay's approach frames the precepts in a way that is helpful in our daily life. He makes them relevant.

Time Out of Mindfulness
In a world of deceit, excess, killing, lying and stealing, the present moment works with faith FOR A FUTURE TO BE POSSIBLE by enlightenment from the Buddha, the practice of love and understanding, and ever bigger and greater numbers of communities seeking wisdom, harmony and awareness. Art and meditation send energy into cell nutrition and nervous system health. Mindfulness teaches respect for all life, generosity, responsibility, careful speech and healthy diet for concentration and insight. Nobel Prize winner Thich Nhat Hanh's book is a beautifully reader-friendly steppingstone to THE GOOD HEART by the Fourteenth Dalai Lama, AWAKENING THE BUDDHIST HEART by Lama Surya Das, and LOVINGKINDNESS by Sharon Salzberg.


Chromophobia (FOCI)
Published in Paperback by Reaktion Books (01 October, 2000)
Author: David Batchelor
Amazon base price: $13.97
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one of few worthwhile books on color, not just for its cover
Fascinating and readably well-written argument that western civilization has a long-held prejudice (though not one shared by the author) against color, especially bright color.

Batchelor is highly literate and informed, plus has an impressive knowledge of contemporary art. His suggestion that color tends to be seen as frivolous/minor/feminine/or even evil is backed up with wide-ranging references to culture (contemporary and earlier), art history, lit., and more. (Including an unexpectedly timely observation that historically, evidence of the decadence of Islam included its profusion of color and pattern.)

Just a few other examples:
--the white space as sign of seriousness and quality in the modern gallery or collector's home
--the art historical ranking of disegno as superior to colore
--in French lit, the symbolic association of rich hues and precious materials with decadence
And much more.

As for me, I almost had to buy this book for its hot pink cover alone

1 of few gd bks on color-& almost had to buy for its cover!
Fascinating and readably well-written argument that western civilization has a long-held prejudice (though not one shared by the author) against color, especially bright color.

Batchelor is highly literate and informed, plus has an impressive knowledge of contemporary art. His suggestion that color tends to be seen as frivolous/minor/feminine/or even evil is backed up with wide-ranging references to culture (contemporary and earlier), art history, lit., and more. (Including an unexpectedly timely observation that historically, evidence of the decadence of Islam included its profusion of color and pattern.)

Just a few other examples:
--the white space as sign of seriousness and quality in the modern gallery or collector's home
--the art historical ranking of disegno as superior to colore
--in French lit, the symbolic association of rich hues and precious materials with decadence
And much more.

As for me, I almost had to buy this book for its hot pink cover alone.

Color in all its problematic glory
Batchelor's own take on color theory is not only a well-researched overview of color in art, architecture, cinema, and literature; it is also a call to action of sorts for artists to reclaim color from its minimalist bastardization in art and its commercial bastardization within the market culture. Batchelor uses the terms "chromophobic" and "chromophilic" to characterize to what extent this bastardization takes place and cites examples from (mainly contemporary) art history as to where the shift from color-as-representation to color-as-color took place.

That discussions of color as secondary to drawing (or design) are neither prevelant in the industry nor in academia proves how engrained into art theory the secondary status of color is. Also of interest is the chapter on the role of semantics and color interpetation. How for example some colors in the abstract such as green-yellows are univerally more difficult to convey than others.

Every serious artist should read this book to reintroduce the importance of color to his/her concerns and to adress contemporary concerns over the loss of color by its oversaturation in less artistic settings.


Brogan & sons
Published in Unknown Binding by Secker and Warburg ()
Author: David Batchelor
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Challenging the Physical Elements
Published in Spiral-bound by Batchwood Books (1995)
Authors: Tony Batchelor and David Woodroffe
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Children in the Dark
Published in Hardcover by Wm Collins & Sons & Co (June, 1982)
Author: David Batchelor
Amazon base price: $13.95
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A dislocated man
Published in Unknown Binding by Secker and Warburg ()
Author: David Batchelor
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Ellsworth Kelly: Spectrums
Published in Paperback by Matthew Marks Gallery (01 March, 1999)
Author: David Batchelor
Amazon base price: $34.95
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History, Events, Lives, Places
Published in Spiral-bound by Batchwood Books (1996)
Authors: Tony Batchelor and David Woodroffe
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John Wood and Paul Harrison
Published in Paperback by Ellipsis London Pr Ltd (November, 2001)
Authors: Charles Esche, David Batchelor, and John Wood
Amazon base price: $18.00
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Minimalism
Published in Paperback by Cambridge Univ Pr (Trd) (January, 1998)
Author: David Batchelor
Amazon base price: $11.90
List price: $17.00 (that's 30% off!)
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