

Happy Clouds, Happy Trees: The Bob Ross Phenomenon [Congdon, Kristin G., Blandy, Doug, Coeyman, Danny] on desertcart.com. *FREE* shipping on qualifying offers. Happy Clouds, Happy Trees: The Bob Ross Phenomenon Review: Beware naked picture of Bob Ross (sort of) - This book is great. It was for a third grade project. I read before my third grader did and it has a naked Bob Ross lol where his private is a leaf. It’s weird. Other than that good book. Accurate Review: Happy Reads - Happy Clouds, Happy Trees is part academic scholarship, part biography and part love letter. The authors do an excellent job of making an argument for Ross' inclusion in the discourse around contemporary art theory and the importance of considering him a savvy, prescient conceptual artist with much more going on than peddling kitsch. The simple, clever illustrations by Danny Coeyman depict Ross in several different art historical periods. They help us to temporarily place the work of Ross amongst different works in the canon to look at Ross' practice from a new perspective, but they are also reverential and touching. Although Happy Clouds, Happy Trees is a scholarly text published by a university press, the writing is accessible and engaging. Recommended to anyone interested in contemporary art that grew up with Bob Ross at home.
| Best Sellers Rank | #981,667 in Books ( See Top 100 in Books ) #1,405 in Biographies of Artists, Architects & Photographers (Books) #1,927 in Pop Culture Art #4,504 in Art History (Books) |
| Customer Reviews | 4.5 4.5 out of 5 stars (82) |
| Dimensions | 6 x 1 x 9 inches |
| ISBN-10 | 1617039950 |
| ISBN-13 | 978-1617039959 |
| Item Weight | 1 pounds |
| Language | English |
| Print length | 200 pages |
| Publication date | April 21, 2014 |
| Publisher | University Press of Mississippi |
N**S
Beware naked picture of Bob Ross (sort of)
This book is great. It was for a third grade project. I read before my third grader did and it has a naked Bob Ross lol where his private is a leaf. It’s weird. Other than that good book. Accurate
R**H
Happy Reads
Happy Clouds, Happy Trees is part academic scholarship, part biography and part love letter. The authors do an excellent job of making an argument for Ross' inclusion in the discourse around contemporary art theory and the importance of considering him a savvy, prescient conceptual artist with much more going on than peddling kitsch. The simple, clever illustrations by Danny Coeyman depict Ross in several different art historical periods. They help us to temporarily place the work of Ross amongst different works in the canon to look at Ross' practice from a new perspective, but they are also reverential and touching. Although Happy Clouds, Happy Trees is a scholarly text published by a university press, the writing is accessible and engaging. Recommended to anyone interested in contemporary art that grew up with Bob Ross at home.
N**A
A Unique Take on Bob
Researching all things Bob: This isn’t mainstream!
D**T
Four Stars
If you know somebody who's into Bob Ross, give them this book as a gift.
S**.
An Okay Book With Unnecessary Author Biases, Giving Insight to Bob Ross and Bob Ross, Inc.
This was a fairly good book to read when it comes to an analysis of Bob Ross and why he paints, how he paints, and how he and his paintings are received in the “Art World”. One of the things that was really creepy was that they equated some of what Bob Ross said and did to “Seduction”?! A quote from the “Seduction” chapter, “On the TV screen, the ability we have to watch Bob paint teeters toward the erotic. Without shame, in his darkened studio, Bob would often tell us to “make love to the canvas”. His language was spiced with phrases like “liquid white”, “big old bush”, “makes me feel good”, and “”caress her”.” I have watched probably half of his “Joy of Painting” shows, and I have never thought any of it as “erotic”. Unfortunately when they compare him to Thomas Kinkade, an artist that paints landscapes among other things, and has made a great deal of money doing it, they play the race card and Christian cards. They criticize Mr. Kinkade for not having people of color in his paintings, and Christian symbolism in others. Of course, they don’t criticize any artists of color who don’t put any whites in their paintings. That would have been the fair thing to do. In a free country like America, people should be allowed to paint whomever they want without criticism like this. So overall, an okay book with some biases, that gives insight into Bob Ross the man and Bob Ross,Inc..
M**Y
Happy painter
I really enjoyed the book, just wish that there would have been more info on Bob's life. I am a certified Bob Ross instructor and I cannot believe how watching Bob on TV and learning to paint has totally changed my life.
J**F
Bob Ross analysis
Great academic look at Bob Ross—very helpful for gathering information to use in a lecture on Ross.
P**N
Not A Bit Informative To Me At All
I bought this book with the hopes of finding out MORE about Bob's life and NOT his effect on viewers of his PBS show. Nor did I buy it to read about criticisms from traditional artists. Those were well known. I have already seen the documentary of Bob's life and I wanted to find out additional info. Apparently the author did nothing in terms of interviewing the people Bob grew up with in Florida, the people who served with him in the U.S. Air Force, the people who also worked with Bill Alexander, the bar Bob worked in, the people who knew both of his wives nor his son Steve who Bob trumped up on the show. This book was a waste of my time and money.
L**.
great book
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