Art in an Emergency
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Köp båda 2 för 356 krA brave writer whose books open up fundamental questions about life and art * Telegraph * Olivia Laing is my new favourite non-fiction writer -- Nick Hornby Like all great critics, Olivia Laing combines formidable intelligence with boundless curiosity and fabulous taste, but she also has a rare quality of intimacy; an ability to connect the reader to a work of art or literature with a directness that lights it up like nothing else. Its why I read her -- James Lasdun Her observations and poetic incisiveness on art, writers and politics are a gift. This is a fascinating, excursive, tonic of a book -- Sinad Gleeson, author of <i>Constellations</i> A thought-provoking, inspiring collection that you can go back to whenever the weather takes a funny turn * Evening Standard * Funny Weather gives the reader a tangible sense of the sprawling garden of work which Laing has planted. She is to the art world what David Attenborough is to nature: a worthy guide with both a macro and micro vision, fluent in her chosen tongue and always full of empathy and awe * Irish Times * Laing has acted as a kind of cultural sage for the past four years, an accidental literary grande dame of the emotional havoc wrought by late capitalism and digital disconnect * New York Magazine * Laing writes of her creative subjects in a winning, passionate voice that proves both soothing and galvanizing, especially amid a panic . . . Its not just art we need in an emergency, but writers, like Laing, who gently guide our eyes to whats out there -- Alina Cohen * Observer * The hospitality of world view in Olivias writing is a vital force in our disputatious present -- Maria Balshaw, director of Tate Laing combines passion and curiosity in a collection of art-based essays and profiles that reflect the uncertainty of our age * Guardian * Never has a publication been more timely * Dazed * A warm, thinking, enticing sweep of a book, like spending the afternoon with your brainiest friend -- Kate Mosse, author of <i>The Burning Chambers</i> A fine writers embrace of the artists who preceded her, friendly visits with their lives and loving acknowledgement of their foundational contributions. A work of joy in recognition -- Sarah Schulman The book to help you make sense of the world . . . [a] mesmerizing collection of essays . . . this unique and compassionate book is a mind-expanding opportunity to rethink how we live, and what we can do to change things for the better. * Stylist * A light-footed tour of enriching stories, lives, and ideas * Dazed and Confused * Her gift as a critic is her ability to imaginatively sympathize with her subjects in a way that allows the art and life of the artist to go on radiating meaning after the book is closed * Elle * Breathtaking, beautiful, funny, shocking, sad, revealing, and timely -- Nina Stibbe, author of <i>Love, Nina</i> I yield to absolutely no one in my admiration of Olivia Laing; her essays are magical liberations of words and ideas, art and love; they're the essence of great 21st century literature: brilliantly expressed, wildly uncontained, wilful and wonderfully unbound. -- Philip Hoare, author of RISINGTIDEFALLINGSTAR Olivia Laing shines the light for art writing. Funny Weather urges us to humanise art, and listen to what artists say about life, love and crisis. -- Charlie Porter An incivisive meditation on the value of heartfelt, messy art in our paranoid times * Telegraph * Its not just art we need in an emergency, but writers, like Laing, who gently guide our eyes to whats out there * Observer * Vibrant commentary on art and society by a writer with a sharp eye for the offbeat * Kirkus * Laings essays are urgent, compassionate, enlivening and acutely perceptive, and thats true whether or not we encounter them in an emergency * the arts desk * Her words seem balefully accurate, given what has now overtaken us * Financial Times * Laing is an intellig
Olivia Laing is the author of acclaimed works of non-fiction, To the River, The Trip to Echo Spring and The Lonely City, which has been translated into eighteen languages and sold over 100,000 copies worldwide. Her first novel, Crudo, was a Sunday Times top ten bestseller and won the 2019 James Tait Memorial Prize. Shes a Fellow of the Royal Society of Literature and in 2018 was awarded a Windham-Campbell Prize for non-fiction. Laing writes on art and culture for many publications, including the Guardian, New York Times and frieze. She lives in Suffolk.