| A Review of: Jean Cocteau by Greg GatenbyThe New York house Assouline continues to publish wonderful
introductions to visual artists deserving of wider followings. The
most recent to come my way is Jean Cocteau by Patrick Mauries, a
witty and forthright portrayal. Previous titles in the series
include Picabia and Robert Indiana. All have the same format and
trim size, and all feature aggressively individual introductions
with plain English (not a syllable of Artspeak to be found). One
wishes that Canadian artists were the beneficiaries of such treatment
in their own land. Apart from Douglas & McIntyre, no Canadian house
seems to want to break free, with any regularity, from the stranglehold
imposed by the Group of Seven, native art, and Tom Thompson. One
of the merits of the Assouline texts is their brevity: they are not
monographs but rather well-illustrated, intelligent, adult initiations
into the work of painters and sculptors whose work is not always
easy to grasp at first viewing.
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