Yield The journal of an artist

Anne Truitt, 1921-2004

Book - 2022

"Celebrating Anne Truitt's centenary, this posthumously published work serves as the fourth and final volume in her remarkable series of journals. In the spring of 1974, the artist Anne Truitt (1921-2004) committed herself to keeping a journal for a year. She would continue the practice, sometimes intermittently, over the next six years, writing in spiral-bound notebooks and setting no guidelines other than to 'let the artist speak.' These writings were published as Daybook: The Journal of an Artist (1982). Two other journal volumes followed: Turn (1986) and Prospect (1996). This book, the final volume, comprises journals the artist kept from the winter of 2001 to the spring of 2002, two years before her death. In Yield,... Truitt's unflinching honesty is on display as she contemplates her place in the world and comes to terms with the intellectual, practical, emotional, and spiritual issues that an artist faces when reconciling her art with her life, even as that life approaches its end. Truitt illuminates a life and career in which the demands, responsibilities, and rewards of family, friends, motherhood, and grandmotherhood are ultimately accepted, together with those of a working artist"--Amazon.com.

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Subjects
Genres
Diaries
Autobiographies
Published
New Haven : Yale University Press [2022]
Language
English
Main Author
Anne Truitt, 1921-2004 (author)
Other Authors
Rachel Kushner (writer of foreword)
Physical Description
xiii, 201 pages : illustration ; 22 cm
Bibliography
Includes bibliographical references.
ISBN
9780300260403
Contents unavailable.
Review by Publisher's Weekly Review

In this impressive final installment of the artist's series of diaries (Prospect), late American sculptor Truitt (1921--2004) lyrically looks back on 80 years of life. As novelist Rachel Kushner notes in the book's foreword, "to read Truitt's diary shows me what she thinks about without a mannered or false layer." Written from 2001 to 2002, these daily entries indeed offer a version of Truitt free of artifice as she meditates on the sacred and mundane. In poetic vignettes, she conjures outdoor idylls, like nights spent sleeping on her porch in Big Sur: "before dawn, fog flowed from the Pacific Ocean so that... I lay between a cloud and a dark, starred sky." Other entries deliver simmering takes on the news, such as the inauguration of President George W. Bush, which prompts Truitt to presciently admit, "I am anxious for the country." Elsewhere, tender reflections on fellow 20th-century artists--such as Donald Judd, "who left a whole town, Marfa... a memorial to his life"--give way to thoughts on aging, a "radical situation" persistently knocking at her door. While the fragile nature of her body preoccupies most of the writing, her mind is sharp as ever: "My life has turned out the way it has because... consulted myself and no one else." This sparks with intelligence. (Apr.)

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