Director's Foreword vii Lisa G Corrin Acknowledgments viii Corinne Granof William Blake and the Age of Aquarius 1 Stephen F Eisenman Prophets, Madmen, and Millenarians 79 Mark Crosby William Blake on the West Coast 101 Elizabeth Ferrell William Blake and Art against Surveillance 141 Jacob Henry Leveton Building Golgonooza in the Age of Aquarius 161 John P Murphy Sendak, Blake, and the Image of Childhood 183 Mark Crosby Blake Now and Then 199 WJT Mitchell Notes 206 Contributors 223 Index 224 Credits 231
Stephen F. Eisenman is professor of art history at Northwestern University. Mark Crosby is assistant professor of English at Kansas State University. Elizabeth Ferrell is assistant professor of art history at Arcadia University. Jacob Henry Leveton is a PhD candidate in art history at Northwestern. W.J.T. Mitchell is the Gaylord Donnelley Distinguished Service Professor of English and Art History at the University of Chicago. John P. Murphy is research associate in the Department of American Art at the Art Institute of Chicago.
"One of the The New York Times Best Art Books of 2017, chosen by
Holland Cotter"
"Honorable Mention for the 2018 PROSE Award in Art Exhibitions,
Association of American Publishers"
"In 1948, in a Spanish Harlem apartment, the Beat poet Allen
Ginsberg had an auditory hallucination of Blake reciting 'Ah
Sun-flower!' and other mind-altering verses. That vision changed
Ginsberg’s life, and Blake became a touchstone figure for many
radical American artists of the 1950s and his destroy-all-tyrants
radar continued to burn through the 1960s. It would certainly find
appropriate targets today, as is confirmed by this excellent book,
the catalog for an exhibition at the Block Museum of Art,
Northwestern University."---Holland Cotter, New York Times
"The works of William Blake gradually but conclusively made its way
into the poetry of Allen Ginsberg, the principles of Jim Morrison
and The Doors, incantations from Van Morrison, and the religious
work of Bob Dylan. Indeed, Blake has been everywhere and nowhere at
the same time, perhaps just as he would have wanted it to be.
William Blake and the Age of Aquarius--a beautiful volume published
in conjunction with Northwestern University's Block Museum of Art
exhibition of the same name--wonderfully, strikingly, fantastically
puts this formidable artist/ poet/ visionary into a logical
context. . . . Those familiar with William Blake's work will
welcome the considerations of his legacy as seen through visual and
auditory art since the mid-20th century through today. Those
unfamiliar with Blake should still be fascinated by how the man's
work has drifted through the ages without losing much of its power.
No reader of this book will come away from it unmoved and
indifferent to the potential of the artistic sensibility as it
comes to terms with light, dark, and everything in
between."---Christopher John Stephens, PopMatters
"William Blake and the Age of Aquarius is the most intriguing book
on Blake since Marsha Keith Schuchard’s expose of him as a
swinger."---Dominic Green, The Spectator
"One of the most stunning books of art I have ever seen and read. I
highly suggest this book to everyone."---Anna Maria Polidori, Al
Femminile
"A handsomely designed book . . . including an excellent historical
overview."---Albert Rivero, Times Literary Supplement
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