Author picture

Sandra Forty

Author of M C Escher

63+ Works 1,295 Members 6 Reviews

About the Author

Sandra Forty was born in Worthing and educated at Exeter College and London's School of Slavonic and East European Studies. A career magazine journalist, she has written a number of books including a study of Pre-Raphaelites and a history of art. Sandra lives in Surrey with her husband and two show more children show less

Works by Sandra Forty

M C Escher (2003) 259 copies
World of Art (1998) 133 copies, 2 reviews
Symbols (2003) 100 copies
Vermeer (2004) 74 copies, 1 review
The Pre-Raphaelites (1983) 51 copies
Art of the Japanese Masters (2004) 43 copies
Mucha (2011) 43 copies, 1 review
Timeless Venice (2007) 35 copies
Wonders of the World (2006) 28 copies
Architecture: Defining Structures (2004) 26 copies, 1 review
Defining Moments: Disasters (2005) 23 copies
Van Gogh (2003) 20 copies
Ansel Adams In the National Archives (2006) 19 copies, 1 review
Beautiful Britain (2002) 18 copies
Edouard Manet (1965) 16 copies
hokusai (2013) 15 copies
Albrecht Dürer (2012) 15 copies
Americans Through the Lens (2001) 15 copies
Paul Gaguin (2013) 14 copies
Arcimboldo (2011) 14 copies
Whistler (2014) 13 copies
Hieronymus Bosch (2012) 13 copies
Botanical Prints (2013) 12 copies
Monet (2003) 12 copies
Seurat (2014) 11 copies
Remington (2008) 11 copies
Goya (2014) 10 copies
Pieter Bruegel: The Elder (2014) 9 copies
Ando Hiroshige (2013) 8 copies
Paul Klee (2013) 8 copies
Degas (2013) 8 copies
Hans Memling (2013) 8 copies
Comic Book Covers (2013) 8 copies
Egon Schiele (2012) 8 copies
Klimt (2011) 8 copies
Caravaggio (2013) 8 copies
Modigliani (2012) 7 copies
Hiroshige (2013) 6 copies
Bruegel (Minibooks) (2014) 5 copies
El Greco (2013) 5 copies
Toulouse Lautrec (2012) 4 copies
Michelangelo (2014) 4 copies
John Singer Sargent (2013) 3 copies
Stamps of the World (2012) 3 copies
Frederic Remington (2016) 3 copies
Coins of the World (2012) 3 copies
Beatles DVD (2012) 1 copy
Boxes, Baskets & Pots (2000) 1 copy

Associated Works

Historical Maps of World War I (2002) — Contributor — 44 copies, 1 review

Tagged

Common Knowledge

Birthdate
20th Century
Gender
female
Education
Exeter College
University of London
Occupations
journalist
editor
historian
Short biography
Sandra Forty is a journalist, editor, and historian who has written numerous books about art, architecture, travel and history. She lives in a small town beside the sea with her family in Devonshire, in the UK.
Nationality
UK
Places of residence
Devon, England, UK
Associated Place (for map)
England, UK

Members

Reviews

6 reviews
It took me over seven years to find a Mucha book that had the right balance of history and photos. The book begins with Mucha’s history, much of which I had learned while visiting Prague in 2007. Like most artist, he struggled at his beginnings until an opportunistic “I didn’t go on vacation” over the Christmas of 1894 left him as the only artist available to draw for Sarah Bernhardt’s “Gismonda” theater poster in Paris. It marked the beginning of a new era where his show more “stunning tall, narrow, near-life-size poster in unusually muted colors” marked the beginning of the then-developing Art Nouveau style. He experienced great commercial success with his multitude of commissions at the turn of the century – “advertisements, book illustrations and jackets, magazine covers, paintings, interior decorations, jewelry, wallpaper, and of course, posters”. He had a huge passion for his home country, the now Czech Republic, and his most lofty goal was to be a historic painter telling the story of his land. His “Slav Epic” canvases are now on display in the castle at Moravsky Krumlov.

In this large format book, Mucha’s art has the right canvas to present its beauty, especially his series of decorative panels (mostly in groupings of four) which are tall in height along with the breakthrough posters of Sarah Bernhardt. His history is concisely shared in 14 pages, and the rest are dedicated to his art. I have always had a huge passion for his “Four Times of Day”. In this book, I was particularly drawn to “Music”, one of the “Four Arts” panels. Her playful expression, the attentive eyes, the long luscious brown hair, the perky, dainty breasts with slightly erect nipples, the flowing white gown – it is simply beauty at its best. I particularly enjoy the beauty of the women in his art. Many have rounded faces, some with a slight double chin. Her figure is full, with slight lumps and pumps along arms, backs, and sides just like a real woman. This art reflects true beauty; a beauty lost in today’s measures. Enjoy!
show less
½
A large, beautiful coffee table book with plenty of old favorites. The only obvious drawback is of course, are limitations on an even larger size. For example, the only narrative is the sweeping, 33-page introduction. and only one painting per artist is provided.
Covers Ancient to Post-Modern in 10 sections. Each section has 5 or 6 pages of introductory text and the rest is great full-page color photos.
this book is awesome too. its not the type of ansel adams i would like but great all around. he is a great artist! his artwork is in the coffee shop that i go to. i love looking at his work its amazing!

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Statistics

Works
63
Also by
1
Members
1,295
Popularity
#19,822
Rating
3.8
Reviews
6
ISBNs
149
Languages
5

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