A Big Yes and a Little No

sub-heading:
The Art of Robert Cenedella
Words by
Lauren Purje
An illustrated portrait of a fiercely independent artist who superbly sketches the fault lines of postwar American art.

“A reassuring voice of sanity.”

New York Times

“A genuinely magnetic and forthright presence.”

Slant Magazine

“His work has a full-bodied vitality that, no matter its visual exaggerations, captures that feeling of something like reality.”

Village Voice

“Sincerely raucous satire at a time when dry irony, abstract expressionism, and pop art ruled.”

LA Times
£54
£46

Pre-order now at 15% off. Books will ship in July.

Adding to cart… The item has been added
  • 9.5 x 13 inches, 288 pages, full color throughout
  • Hardcover ISBN 9781682194911
  • E-book ISBN 9781682194928

about the bookabout

Robert Cenedella has always stood just outside the center of American art. Shaped by a formative mentorship with George Grosz, Cenedella built a career that resisted easy categorization—moving between painting, conceptual practice, murals, and advertising while consistently challenging art-world orthodoxies.

A provocateur in the press and gallery, he regularly made headlines: in the tabloids for the a show’s removal of his crucified Santa painting, in the New York Times for selling shares in a single painting. A Big Yes and a Little No is the first comprehensive account of this career, from his early days at the Art Students League of New York to Yes Art, his satirical art movement in which he positioned himself as the anti-Warhol. Based on extensive interviews with the artist and featuring a foreword by Cenedella himself, this book brings together full-color reproductions of paintings, murals, archival photographs, and exhibition ephemera, with accompanying writing explaining his critiques of consumerism and art trends, the anxieties of the Atomic Age, his upbringing and mentorship, and how his work has consistently run up against the shifting political and social landscape of postwar America.

A Big Yes and a Little No offers a richly contextual portrait of an artist who worked across systems by brilliantly critiquing them. Part biography, part visual archive, and part cultural history, it demonstrates how a career built at the margins can illuminate the center of American art.

About The Author / Editor

Photograph courtesy Wikimedia Commons Robert P. Cenedella, Jr. studied at the Art Students League of New York and was mentored by George Grosz. He gained recognition for his paintings of the Atomic Age, illustrations for The Communist Manifesto, his satirical Yes Art series, commissioned works for Bacardi, Heinz, Absolut Vodka, and murals for Le Cirque. Career highlights include a theater piece for Tony Randall, exhibitions at the Château de Bagatelle, and a one-man show at Saatchi & Saatchi’s New York headquarters. A full retrospective of his political works was sponsored by The Nation Institute in 2003. The 2016 documentary Art Bastard brought renewed attention to his work.

Preview

See more

in the media

A Big Yes and a Little No

sub-heading:
The Art of Robert Cenedella
Words by
Lauren Purje
An illustrated portrait of a fiercely independent artist who superbly sketches the fault lines of postwar American art.

“A reassuring voice of sanity.”

New York Times

“A genuinely magnetic and forthright presence.”

Slant Magazine

“His work has a full-bodied vitality that, no matter its visual exaggerations, captures that feeling of something like reality.”

Village Voice

“Sincerely raucous satire at a time when dry irony, abstract expressionism, and pop art ruled.”

LA Times
£54
£46

Pre-order now at 15% off. Books will ship in July.

Pre-Order Now

Adding to cart… The item has been added

about the bookabout

Robert Cenedella has always stood just outside the center of American art. Shaped by a formative mentorship with George Grosz, Cenedella built a career that resisted easy categorization—moving between painting, conceptual practice, murals, and advertising while consistently challenging art-world orthodoxies.

A provocateur in the press and gallery, he regularly made headlines: in the tabloids for the a show’s removal of his crucified Santa painting, in the New York Times for selling shares in a single painting. A Big Yes and a Little No is the first comprehensive account of this career, from his early days at the Art Students League of New York to Yes Art, his satirical art movement in which he positioned himself as the anti-Warhol. Based on extensive interviews with the artist and featuring a foreword by Cenedella himself, this book brings together full-color reproductions of paintings, murals, archival photographs, and exhibition ephemera, with accompanying writing explaining his critiques of consumerism and art trends, the anxieties of the Atomic Age, his upbringing and mentorship, and how his work has consistently run up against the shifting political and social landscape of postwar America.

A Big Yes and a Little No offers a richly contextual portrait of an artist who worked across systems by brilliantly critiquing them. Part biography, part visual archive, and part cultural history, it demonstrates how a career built at the margins can illuminate the center of American art.

About The Author / Editor

Photograph courtesy Wikimedia Commons Robert P. Cenedella, Jr. studied at the Art Students League of New York and was mentored by George Grosz. He gained recognition for his paintings of the Atomic Age, illustrations for The Communist Manifesto, his satirical Yes Art series, commissioned works for Bacardi, Heinz, Absolut Vodka, and murals for Le Cirque. Career highlights include a theater piece for Tony Randall, exhibitions at the Château de Bagatelle, and a one-man show at Saatchi & Saatchi’s New York headquarters. A full retrospective of his political works was sponsored by The Nation Institute in 2003. The 2016 documentary Art Bastard brought renewed attention to his work.

Preview

See more

in the media