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Art Objects
  • Published: 5 July 1996
  • ISBN: 9780099590019
  • Imprint: Vintage
  • Format: Paperback
  • Pages: 208
  • RRP: $28.99

Art Objects

Essays on Ecstasy and Effrontery



These interlocking essays uncover art as an active force in the world - neither elitist or remote, present to those who want it, affecting even those who don't. Winterson's own passionate vision of art is presented here, provocatively and personally, in pieces on Modernism, autobiography, style, painting, the future of fiction, in two essays on Virginia Woolf, and more intimately in pieces where she describes her relationship to her work and the books that she loves.

  • Published: 5 July 1996
  • ISBN: 9780099590019
  • Imprint: Vintage
  • Format: Paperback
  • Pages: 208
  • RRP: $28.99

About the author

Jeanette Winterson

Jeanette Winterson CBE was born in Manchester. Adopted by Pentecostal parents she was raised to be a missionary. This did and didn’t work out.

Discovering early the power of books she left home at 16 to live in a Mini and get on with her education. After graduating from Oxford University she worked for a while in the theatre and published her first novel at 25. Oranges Are Not The Only Fruit is based on her own upbringing but using herself as a fictional character. She scripted the novel into a BAFTA-winning BBC drama. 27 years later she re-visited that material in the bestselling memoir Why Be Happy When You Could Be Normal? She has written 10 novels for adults, as well as children’s books, non-fiction and screenplays. She is Professor of New Writing at the University of Manchester. She lives in the Cotswolds in a wood and in Spitalfields, London.

She believes that art is for everyone and it is her mission to prove it.

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Praise for Art Objects

Courageous... Her writing is spirited and insouciant in its fusing of love of words and sensual desire

Scotsman

Winterson is in fine form in these essays about art

Observer

Flashes of sly wit have an epigrammatic power... On Joyce, Woolf, Conrad, Dickens and the development of English literature she is acute and always interesting...covetable, infuriating, stimulating

Independent