In 2022, when Bob Dylan was performing across the United States and Europe, he was also quietly making art, sketching landscapes, portraits and still lifes.
This November, Simon & Schuster will publish those drawings and others in an oversize art book, “Point Blank (Quick Studies).” The nearly 100 black-and-white drawings were created in 2021 and 2022 and will be paired with prose vignettes by the writers Lucy Sante and Jackie Hamilton, and the producer Eddie Gorodetsky, who worked with Dylan on his radio show and his 2022 book “The Philosophy of Modern Song.”
Many of the drawings depict everyday objects and scenes: a roll of Scotch tape, a karaoke singer, a pair of roller skaters, a suit of armor, a suspension bridge.
“There’s a melancholy to them which is quite beautiful, but it’s not without a hopefulness and humor,” said Sean Manning, Simon & Schuster’s vice president and publisher.
For decades, Dylan kept his artwork private; he didn’t display it publicly until around 2007. Since then, he’s had exhibitions at galleries and museums around the world, including in New York, London and Shanghai, and has released other art books, including “The Drawn Blank Series,” which was published in 2008.
Reviews have been mixed. “His attempts at being a visual artist have gone from bad to worse,” the New York Times art critic Roberta Smith wrote about a 2012 exhibition of his paintings at Gagosian Gallery in New York. In a laudatory review in the Guardian of a 2016 show at the Halcyon Gallery in London, the critic Jonathan Jones praised Dylan as more than just a dabbler: “This guy can look. His drawings are intricate, sincere, charged with curiosity.”
A current exhibit of Dylan’s art is on display through July 6 at the Halcyon Gallery. The collection, also titled “Point Blank,” features paintings based on drawings that are included in the forthcoming book.
To coincide with the release of “Point Blank,” Simon & Schuster is also releasing a newly recorded, unabridged audiobook of Dylan’s 2004 memoir, “Chronicles: Volume I,” narrated by the actor Sean Penn. It runs to 10 hours — twice as long as the earlier version, also narrated by Penn.
Dylan’s fans have been eagerly anticipating the second volume of his memoir, but no release date has been set.
Alexandra Alter writes about books, publishing and the literary world for The Times.
The post Bob Dylan’s New Release: A Big Book of Black-and-White Drawings appeared first on New York Times.