Painting Time
A Novel
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- $8.500
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- $8.500
Descripción editorial
Named a most anticipated book of 2021 by The Guardian | The Millions
An aesthetic and existential coming-of-age novel exploring the apprenticeship of a young female painter
In Maylis de Kerangal’s Painting Time, we are introduced to the burgeoning young artist Paula Karst, who is enrolled at the famous Institut de Peinture in Brussels. Unlike the friends she makes at school, Paula strives to understand the specifics of what she’s painting—replicating a wood’s essence or a marble’s wear requires method, technique, and talent, she finds, but also something else: craftsmanship. She resolutely chooses the painstaking demands of craft over the abstraction of high art.
With the attention of a documentary filmmaker, de Kerangal follows Paula’s apprenticeship, punctuated by brushstrokes, hard work, sleepless nights, sore muscles, and long, festive evenings. After completing her studies at the Institute, Paula continues to practice her art in Paris, in Moscow, then in Italy on the sets of great films, all as if rehearsing for a grand finale: a job working on Lascaux IV, a facsimile reproduction of the world’s most famous paleolithic cave art and the apotheosis of human cultural expression.
An enchanted, atmospheric, and highly aesthetic coming-of-age novel, Painting Time is an intimate and unsparing exploration of craft, inspiration, and the contours of the contemporary art world. As she did in her acclaimed novels The Heart and The Cook, Maylis de Kerangal unravels a tightly wound professional world to reveal the beauty within.
PUBLISHERS WEEKLY
De Kerangal (The Cook) tells an insightful story of a young woman's exploration of her relationship to art. Paula Karst is a student at the Institut de Peinture in Brussels, where she determines to master the exacting processes of wood graining, marbleizing, and tortoiseshell. Fully immersed in her work, Paula becomes detached from life but eventually bonds with two classmates, including her attractive roommate, Jonas. Later, she builds a career working as a scenic painter on film sets throughout Europe, and keeps in touch with Jonas on the internet. Rather than plot, the book is driven by an extended contemplation of the creative process and what it means to be human. As Paula works on a replica of the prehistoric Lascaux cave paintings, Jonas and Paula reunite. Jonas imagines a world without humans, while Paula feels a connection through her art with the Cro-Magnons who made the original cave paintings. What begins as Paula's personal story expands by the end to a brilliant philosophical study on the origins of human art, capped with a moving epiphanic moment. This perfectly captures a craftsperson's singular passion.