Thunderclap : A Memoir Of Art And Life And Sudden Death
Named a Top 100 Must-Read Book of the Year by Time and a Best Book of the Year by The New Yorker * Winner of the 2024 Writers' Prize for Nonfiction * Shortlisted for the Inaugural Womenās Prize for Nonfiction * Longlisted for the RSL Ondaatje Prize
New York Times bestselling author Laura Cumming ācombines first-rate art history with deeply felt memoirā (The Washington Post) in this fascinating, little-known story of the massive explosion in Holland that killed Carel Fabritius, renowned painter of The Goldfinch and A View of Delft and nearly killed Johannes Vermeerātwo of the greatest artists of the 17th century.
āExquisite.ā āSimon Schama, The Guardian
As a brilliant art critic and historian, Laura Cumming has explored the importance of art in life and can give us a perspective on the time and place in which the artist worked. Now, through the lens of one dramatic event in 17th-century Holland, Cumming āhas fashioned a book that combines memoir, art criticism, and history to illuminating effectā (The New York Times Book Review).
In 1654, the Thunderclapāan enormous explosion at a gunpowder storeādevasted the city of Delft, killing hundreds of people, including the extraordinary painter Carel Fabritius, and injuring thousands more.
Framing the story around the life of Fabritius, Cumming illuminates this extraordinary moment in art history while also writing about her own father, a painter. Like Dutch art, the story gradually links country, city, town, street, house, interiorāall the way to the bird on its perch, the blue and white tile, the smallest seed in a loaf of bread. The impact of a painting and how it can enter our thoughts, influence our view and understanding of the world is the heart of this book. Cumming has brought her unique eye to her most compelling subject yet.
Featuring beautiful full-color images of Dutch paintings throughout, this is āa glorious tribute to the two men who showed her the truth of the notion that paintings offer āa land in themselves, a society, a place to beāā (The Economist).