Synopses & Reviews
The remarkable autobiography of an American artist's dreams, passions, and work
As an American abstract expressionist painter and early protege of Leo Castelli, Jon Schueler lived and worked among the country's most gifted artists: Clyfford Still, Mark Rothko, Helen Frankenthaler, Jackson Pollock, Willem De Kooning, Jasper Johns, and many others. Schueler was mysteriously driven to connect nature with a deeply personal passion. In the late 1950s, he travelled for the first time to Mallaig, a town in western Scotland on the Sound of Sleat, where the dramatic landscape inspired his art and continued to influence him throughout his career.
Over nearly thirty years, as he painted, Schueler worked on this book. In it, he struggled to define what it was that compelled him to paint and wrestled with a conflict that confronts all artists--how to strike a balance between the need to create in solitude and the desire for human intimacy. The Sound of Sleat tells the story of a passionate life and offers a fascinating look at the New York art world in the latter half of this century and an astonishing window on art, hope, despair, and creativity.
About the Author
Jon Schueler grew up in Milwaukee and served in the U.S. Army Air Corps during World War Two. Several years after being discharged from the military, he began to paint. In 1951 he moved to New York, and from his base there sojourned in Scotland, Paris, Italy, and at several U.S. universities. His widow, Magda Salvesen, edited his manuscript into this book.