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Letters to Gwen John Hardcover – April 26, 2022

4.3 4.3 out of 5 stars 53 ratings

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With original artworks throughout, an extraordinary fusion of memoir and artistic biography from the acclaimed artist and author of Self-Portrait.

Dearest Gwen, I know this letter to you is an artifice. I know you are dead and that I’m alive and that no usual communication is possible between us but, as my mother used to say, “Time is a strange substance” and who knows really, with our time-bound comprehension of the world, whether there might be some channel by which we can speak to each other, if we only knew how.

Celia Paul’s
Letters to Gwen John centers on a series of letters addressed to the Welsh painter Gwen John (1876–1939), who has long been a tutelary spirit for Paul. John spent much of her life in France, making art on her own terms and, like Paul, painting mostly women. John’s reputation was overshadowed during her lifetime by her brother, Augustus John, and her lover Auguste Rodin. Through the epistolary form, Paul draws fruitful comparisons between John’s life and her own: their shared resolve to protect the sources of their creativity, their fierce commitment to painting, and the ways in which their associations with older male artists affected the public’s reception of their work.

Letters to Gwen John is at once an intimate correspondence, an illuminating portrait of two painters (including full-color plates of both artists’ work), and a writer/artist’s daybook, describing Paul’s first exhibitions in America, her search for new forms, her husband’s diagnosis of cancer, and the onset of the global pandemic. Paul, who first revealed her talents as a writer with her memoir, Self-Portrait, enters with courage and resolve into new unguarded territory—the artist at present—and the work required to make art out of the turbulence of life.
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Editorial Reviews

Review

"Letters to Gwen John paints equally detailed and revealing portraits of Paul and John. . . . Paul writes to John as one would a mentor, a confidant, a dear friend . . . Their work proves that accessing genius and negotiating life’s mundanities are not mutually exclusive." —Sophia Stewart, Hyperallergic

"Praising Gwen John’s compact self-portraits, Paul notes that because 'women painters hardly even have a foothold in the history of art … they need to find oblique ways of self-representation.' Here, Celia Paul has done that, inventing at least a toehold for these two most solitary of artists, imagining them as companions able to scale the heights they deserve." —Cynthia Payne,
Brooklyn Rail

"
Letters continues, then, Paul’s endeavor in Self-Portrait to assert herself as subject, not merely as model and muse. . . . Yet to read Letters, like Self-Portrait, as a triumphant portrait of the woman artist would not be quite right. It would, first of all, disregard the remarkable dialectics of loneliness and desire, of love and manipulation, that Paul handles with patient—even disarming—frankness. . . . The dated letters offer only a light dusting of chronology: alongside the imaginative biography of John, and alongside the dated journal entries, the book is also a foray into Paul’s past. The effect is one of a dreamscape, a mesh of past and present, as the borders between the two female artists soften and start to give." —Victoria Baena, The Baffler

"Celia Paul, in both her painting and her writing, is a formidable guardian of her own inner life, as well as a careful chronicler of what it means to traverse a boundary that is barely perceptible, hardly there at all, and yet is the place where truth emerges, hangs in the balance, is not quite distinguishable from a lie.
Letters to Gwen John, the British artist’s new epistolary memoir (following 2019’s Self-Portrait), is a profound act of truth-telling made possible by the thrilling risk of tarrying at that contested border. Paul’s writing is a kind of ritual, as well as a pilgrimage, in which she leads us into those hidden places where understanding is beside the point, and invites us simply to dwell with her and whomever else she summons." —Jack Hanson, Artforum

"An excellent new book. . . . Paul began her Letters to Gwen John in 2019, and they became a way of coping both with the pandemic and with the return of her husband’s cancer. In a nod to the epistolary novel, she addresses her letters to ‘Dear Gwen.’ It’s a risky conceit, but as the intimacy grows — if not with John, then certainly with us — their clarity on the grammars of gender is compelling, and utterly contemporary. Truthfulness does not run one way, any more than power and vulnerability do." —Drusilla Modjeska,
New York Times Book Review

"It is really Paul who’s centre stage, and she is fascinating; I do not feel, at this point, that I could ever tire of her mind, and the unlikely, singular way it turns. I want to know as much about her as I possibly can. . . . Unreciprocated desire, and how – if – it might be quelled, is a theme of this book. . . it is very much an artist’s book. . .  It’s rarer than one imagines, this: so few artists are able to articulate why, and how, they work. Then again, this is a volume born of battles that are, to a degree, universal in the case of women: the cruelty of men, the shame of ambition, the struggle (always!) to find space to think, to be free. Paul is 62 now; this book has been gestating for a long time." —Rachel Cooke,
The Guardian

"In opening up her story to include John’s, the book takes on a markedly different shape to its precursor, combining this intimate, immediate form of memoir with elements of biography and art criticism. The end result is a beguiling, singular work of art – a portrait of two lives, entwined through time and space. . . Paul’s prose. . . glints and gleams on the page." —Lucy Scholes,
Daily Telegraph

"[
Letters] is at once diary and confessional, biography and autobiography and something between the two. It maps the landmarks of the two artists’ lives, exploring their motivation through the tenuously imagined dialogue of two kindred minds. . . . it is Gwen John’s life as much as her own that is the focus of this book." —Honor Clerk, Spectator (UK)

"It’s a work of biography, analysis, reverence, and supplication, and it’s filled with buoyant representations of both Paul’s and John’s work. A charge runs through it, the crackly static electricity of two connected souls touching hands across a century." —Hillary Kelly,
Vulture

"Painter Paul shares her thoughts on art, relationships, and the creative life through letters to Welsh artist Gwen John in these intimate meditations. . . . Paul’s prose is spare and luminous, revealing her painter’s eye in attention to color, texture, and depth. . . The included paintings, both John’s and Paul’s, are breathtaking. Fellow artists will relish this lucid look at what is required to 'live and paint truthfully.'" 
—Publishers Weekly

"Beautiful, tender, and riveting. I have taken this book into my heart." Claire-Louise Bennett, author of Checkout 19

"A miraculous, door-opening book." Julia Blackburn, author of Time Song

About the Author

Celia Paul's work has been exhibited internationally and is in the collections of the British Museum, the National Portrait Gallery in London, and the Metropolitan Museum of Art. Her major solo exhibitions include Celia Paul, curated by Hilton Als, at both the Yale Center for British Art and the Huntington Art Gallery. She lives in London.

Product details

  • Publisher ‏ : ‎ New York Review Books (April 26, 2022)
  • Language ‏ : ‎ English
  • Hardcover ‏ : ‎ 352 pages
  • ISBN-10 ‏ : ‎ 1681376407
  • ISBN-13 ‏ : ‎ 978-1681376400
  • Item Weight ‏ : ‎ 1.71 pounds
  • Dimensions ‏ : ‎ 5.47 x 1.42 x 8.05 inches
  • Customer Reviews:
    4.3 4.3 out of 5 stars 53 ratings

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Customer reviews

4.3 out of 5 stars
4.3 out of 5
53 global ratings

Top reviews from the United States

Reviewed in the United States on October 2, 2022
This is a great book for people thinking about the artist life. She writes beautifully and by writing to Gwen John she compares and contrasts over time. Lovely
2 people found this helpful
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Reviewed in the United States on May 1, 2022
I wanted to love this book. But Celia Paul, the author, writes a prose so self consciously pretty, soft and gauzy, that you feel she is in hiding from seeing the truth of her life or refuses to share it with the reader. She implies she was used by Lucian Freud, her lover, but it's she who uses him now, marketing herself as an artistic heir, which gains her gallery recognition and publisher's interest. By writing these fictional letters to Gwen John, a great, brave and innovative artist, Paul similarly equates herself with John. This is Celia Paul's MO, to raise her own stature by conjuring self aggrandizing parallels to other superb artists. Unfortunately her own paintings, like her prose, are muddy and vague.
Her book is a geisha's kimono, opened for a second then shut tight, accompanied by innocent giggles. And because her self understanding is so limited, what she writes about Gwen John is also dim. A far better written and much more insightful book about Gwen John is Sue Coe's biography.
7 people found this helpful
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Reviewed in the United States on August 31, 2022
This book leaves a bad taste. In attempting to re-frame the narrative around her relationship with Lucien Freud and Gwen John's to Rodin from one of abuse by an older more famous male mentor to one of artistic self-determination, she creates a masochistic ideal of out of withdrawa and denial of personal needs and attachments (including giving up care of her only son to her mother in order to stay true to her art) and calls it her true artistic self. This is so painfully un-self aware that one cringes to read how she valorizes her -and John's acceptance of their meagre, self-circumscribed lives. Paul's paintings of light and sky and water are masterful. But in her portraits, no one is allowed to be beautiful , their essence is reduced to their suffering. When she painted a portrait of her mother and her relation to God, she reduced her a grim figure beneath the weight of a 'dark night of the soul." But her mother, for whom her religion was a source of hope and joy, responded, "It's not like that at all!" A very revealing book, but not at all in the ways one imagines the author thinks....
One person found this helpful
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Top reviews from other countries

Mrs. K. A. Wheatley
5.0 out of 5 stars Fascinating Glimpse Into the Process of Painting
Reviewed in the United Kingdom on February 3, 2023
I had read Self-Portrait by Celia Paul before I read this, and I think that to get the absolute most out of this book, it would be good to have read it too. It's not that the two don't work separately, but reading them together creates a much richer, more satisfying work.

In Self-Portrait, Paul looks at her early life as a painter and the formative experience of having been the long-term lover of Lucian Freud. Here, Paul looks at one of the other great painterly influences on her life, the painter, Gwen John.

Framed as a series of letters to John, Paul uses an exploration of her work and life as a lens by which to view her own work and life. These are more love letters than anything else. They have an element of tenderness and yearning to them that was interestingly missing from her writings about Freud which seemed much more fearful and cowed. It is through her love for John that Paul instils tenderness, a sly humour and a symbolic depth into her work.
One person found this helpful
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westmer
5.0 out of 5 stars Superb, subtle, sensitive
Reviewed in the United Kingdom on August 18, 2022
Celia Paul is that rarest of artists, one who can write pellucid prose without ever descending into the turgid language of most artists’ written statements or critics’ pretentious prose.
As a result she has created a moving and incredibly readable account of what it is to be a female artist in what remains a man’s world. Hugely generous but also very clear eyed.
Best visual arts book of the decade.
One person found this helpful
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GinaB
5.0 out of 5 stars So special
Reviewed in the United Kingdom on May 3, 2022
I heard the end of an interview with Celia Paul on Woman's Hour recently when she was discussing this book. I was immediately drawn to her beautiful voice and had to listen to the recording in full on BBC Iplayer. This book is similarly beautiful and I really recommend it. The intimacy of her imagined world with Gwen is just intoxicating. Buy it for yourself and as a present for like-minded souls.
5 people found this helpful
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Margaret Ann Needham
4.0 out of 5 stars Christmas present for a niece
Reviewed in the United Kingdom on December 19, 2022
One of our nieces is a great admirer of Gwen John. The book has been very well reviewed.