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Books > Arts & Architecture > History of art / art & design styles > 1400 to 1600
Enjoying Great Art Series: Umbrellas are a part of our everyday
life. But do we think of them when we think of great art? Here is a
picture book for adults and students of all ages...A picture book
of umbrellas (used to keep off the rain) and parasols (to keep off
the sun) in art Different colors, shapes, sizes...Some that are
only small parts of the painting, some which are the focus of the
painting. You can look through these paintings that span many
centuries, and notice the similarities and the differences between
them...See the colors, the textures and patterns, and more. Take
note of whether there are people included in the different
paintings, and if so, if men, women, or children are more often
portrayed. And most of all, enjoy Note to parents: All of the
paintings selected for the books in this series are child-friendly
- but we aren't necessarily recommending all of the other paintings
by these same artists If you and your children want to go exploring
after this - please exercise caution.
Enjoying Great Art Series: Food is a part of our everyday life. But
do we think of it when we think of great art? Here is a picture
book for adults and students of all ages...A picture book of food
in art Different quantity, colors, shapes, sizes...Some where the
food is only a small part of the painting, some where it is the
focus of the painting. You can look through these paintings that
span many centuries, and notice the similarities and the
differences between them...See the colors, the textures and
patterns, and more. Take note of whether there are people included
in the different paintings, and if so, if men, women, or children
are more often portrayed with the food. And most of all, enjoy Note
to parents: All of the paintings selected for the books in this
series are child-friendly - but we aren't necessarily recommending
all of the other paintings by these same artists If you and your
children want to go exploring after this - please exercise caution.
Bridges are clearly important structures - and not just the ones of
the present day (my apologies to Whitman). But do we think of them
when we think of great art? Here is a picture book of bridges (from
around the world) for students of all ages...Different colors,
shapes, sizes...Some that are only small parts of the painting,
some which are the focus of the painting.
One of the original books in the "Enjoying Great Art" series, but
it has been enlarged - with more, and bigger paintings now: Animals
are a part of our everyday life. But do we think of them when we
think of great art? Here is a picture book for students of all
ages...A picture book of animals in art Different colors, shapes,
sizes...Some that are only small parts of the painting, some which
are the focus of the painting. You can look through these paintings
that span many centuries, and notice the similarities and the
differences between them...See the colors, the textures and
patterns, and more. Take note of whether there are people included
in the different paintings, and if so, if men, women, or children
are more often portrayed with the animals. And most of all, enjoy
Note to parents: All of the paintings selected for the books in
this series are child-friendly - but we aren't necessarily
recommending all of the other paintings by these same artists If
you and your children want to go exploring after this - please
exercise caution.
There is no shortage of books and booklets about Leonardo da Vinci,
including by this very author. So what makes this one different?
This small, full-color book joins Catherine's growing set of
"Enjoying Great Art" books that concentrate on the art itself, with
very little verbal interruption. And just like the other booklets
in this series, this one is in chronological order. But this
booklet's focus is on the art of Leonardo da Vinci, showcasing each
of the paintings currently attributed in part or in whole to the
great master. It also includes a number of his sketches, which are
also extremely artistic, and several paintings by other authors
that relate to Leonardo da Vinci and his work. Maps, quotes, and
"job" titles have been added to round out the extras included. So
whether you are starting a study of Leonardo da Vinci or just
looking for another great book to add to your da Vinci collection,
you are likely to enjoy this little tribute to the genius of this
one man - who packed much into his sixty-seven year life.
FRA ANGELICO, known by various names, including Fra Giovanni Beato
Angelico da Fiesole (1399?-1455), is one of the very few painters
of the Italian Renaissance who painted religious pictures
exclusively. Almost all Angelico's paintings are religious - he did
not paint secular portraits, like, say, Giovanni Bellini or
Ghirlandaio. It was Vasari who stressed Angelico's purity,
holiness, faith, humility and devout nature, and this description
of Angelico as a holy monk-like painter persists throughout the
centuries. John Ruskin called Angelico 'an inspired saint'.
Introduction: The idea to solve the Voynich came to me when I first
looked at the glyphs of the entire MS-408 when I first came across
it online around 2009. It was a complete mystery and I desperately
wanted to know what was behind the so called curtain of the code;
like anyone else who has witnessed its very intense complex
structure. A starting point for me was the astrology (Folio 67r)
wheel and putting together a cipher to break it down. My
understanding of astrology helped too and the wheel seldom had
tarot side to it included. I counted the glyphs of the Voynich code
that were similar and would number them in their perspective place
marks. This enabled me to have at least a baseline for the highest
and lowest number of Voynich letters to establish which alphabet I
would have to find and match it up too. I tried Spanish first,
because of the number of vowels and it did not pan out. Well French
and German did not work either. Finally, my cipher unraveled nine
words from the Rosetta Wheel (Folio 57v) in Italian and then I
targeted the Astrology section with amazing results. My decrypting
method included this scenario. First I went online and found a
great Italian anagram engine which I inputted my cipher into so
that it would rearrange the letters into readable Italian. Then I
ran a string of sentences together that followed logic and well
magic happened. It (Folio 58r) was a mind blowing experience for me
knowing that I was making sense out of MS-408.
Old St Peter's Basilica in Rome stood for over eleven centuries
until it was demolished to make room for today's church on the same
Vatican site. Its last eyewitness, Maffeo Vegio, explained to the
Roman hierarchy how revival of the papacy, whose prestige after the
exile to Avignon had been diminished, was inseparable from a
renewed awareness of the primacy of Peter's Church. To make his
case, Vegio wrote a history founded on credible written and visual
evidence. The text guides us through the building's true story in
its material reality, undistorted by medieval guides. This was its
living memory and a visualization of the continuity of Roman
history into modern times. This volume makes available the first
complete English translation of Vegio's text. Accompanied by
full-color digital reconstructions of the Basilica as it appeared
in Vegio's day.
New, full-color, larger size book When did Leonardo da Vinci paint
the Last Supper? Why did Leonardo paint the Last Supper? How did he
paint the Last Supper? Was Leonardo's Last Supper the first
rendition of the Last Supper? Was it the last? Here in one
convenient location you will find the answers to these, and many
other, questions - with dozens of beautiful pictures of paintings
that came before and after Leonardo's Last Supper - as well as many
details about how he painted his mural, and the history of it over
the last 500 years. A treat for art and history buffs alike Note:
This book focuses on Leonardo da Vinci's well-known version of the
Last Supper, with some of the before and after versions included.
For even more versions of the Last Supper (with less text and more
pictures), see Catherine's In Art: The Last Supper book.
Part of the "Enjoying Great Art" series by Catherine Jaime and
Deirdre Fuller: Lighthouses may or may not be a part of your
everyday life, depending on whether we live near a coast, or spend
much time visiting in the area. But, either way, do we think of
lighthouses when we think of great art? Here is a picture book for
students of all ages...A picture book of lighthouses in art
Different colors, shapes, sizes...Some that are only small parts of
the painting, some which are the focus of the painting.
Another book in the "Enjoying Great Art" series: Self-Portraits -
More than three dozen different self-portraits by artists from
around the world and through the ages. Great fun for adults and
students of all ages. (As with the other books in this series, all
the paintings in this book are family-friendly - though, sadly, we
can't say the same of all of the other paintings by the same
artists.)
Word searches, drawings, quotes, and more...all arranged in both a
topical and chronological order to help introduce students to the
amazing work of Leonardo da Vinci. This book is a great compliment
to Da Vinci: His Life and His Legacy, but it is also a great
stand-alone title. Each topic - Leonardo the Mathematician,
Leonardo and the Horse, Leonardo the Architect, and many others -
includes a historical context and ideas for hands-on study of that
topic. The ideas in the book have been classroom tested and
kid-approved (This book includes everything from Catherine's Da
Vinci Unit Study, Da Vinci Student Book, and more )
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The Young Durer
(Hardcover)
Stephanie Buck, Stephanie Porras, D. Freedberg, Michael Roth
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R1,357
Discovery Miles 13 570
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Ships in 9 - 17 working days
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Accompanying a landmark exhibition at the Courtauld Gallery, this
book examines the remarkable drawings made by Du rer as a young man
from 1490 to 1495, especially those made during his journeyman
years, or Wanderjahre - considered the final part of a craftsman's
training - and a second shorter trip which immediately followed and
seems to have brought the artist to Italy. These trips form the
framework for the book, which focuses on the young artist's figure
studies and has at its heart the Courtauld Gallery's double-sided
drawing of a Wise Virgin and Two studies of the artist's left leg.
This superbly ambitious work serves as a springboard to explore in
depth the role of drawing at this stage of Du rer's career. It
allows us to address a series of crucial questions: how Du rer
formed 'his hand', how he responded to artistic challenges
presented by contemporary and earlier art (both on a stylistic and
an iconographic level), how his pursuit of professional success was
linked with the quest for an individual artistic identity, and how
the strategy of recording his own creative achievements in drawings
dovetails with his claim for a new status for the artist in his
city. The scholarly and beautifully illustrated catalogue is
introduced with five essays by distinguished experts. Stephanie
Buck examines the documentary evidence and attempts to reconstruct
the motivations and activities of Du rer's travels as a young man.
David Freedberg discusses Du rer's obsessive observation and
recording of himself in portraits and in studies of his limbs.
These represent the first critical steps in the artist's developing
understanding of the body, and of the ways in which its movements
could not just show emotion, but rouse the equivalent sense of
torsion, tension and pathos in the bodies and minds of his viewers.
Stephanie Porras looks at Du rer's copies of drawings or prints
circulating in Nuremberg workshops or acquired during the
Wanderjahre, which were used as a means of seeking inspiration, of
challenging himself to draw more sophisticated figures and dynamic
compositions. Michael Roth asks the question of how the three
strands of the art of the line- drawing, engraving and woodcut -
structurally correspond in Du rer's work and, consequently, how
drawing merges with certain manual aspects of printing. A final
essay presents new technical research on Du rer's early drawings
undertaken collaboratively in a number of leading collections of
the artist's work, and aims to enrich our understanding of the
young Du rer's approach to the medium of drawing.
The fin de siecle not only designated the end of the Victorian
epoch but also marked a significant turn toward modernism.
Extraordinary Aesthetes critically examines literary and visual
artists from England, Ireland, and Scotland whose careers in
poetry, fiction, and illustration flourished during the concluding
years of the nineteenth century. This collection draws special
attention to the exceptional contributions that artists, poets, and
novelists made to the cultural world of the late 1880s and 1890s.
The essays illuminate a range of established, increasingly
acknowledged, and lesser-known figures whose contributions to this
brief but remarkably intense cultural period warrant close
attention. Such figures include the critically neglected Mabel
Dearmer, whose stunning illustrations appear in Evelyn Sharp's
radical fairy tales for children. Equally noteworthy is the
uncompromising short fiction of Ella D'Arcy, who played a pivotal
role in editing the most famous journal of the 1890s, the Yellow
Book. The discussion extends to a range of legendary writers,
including Max Beerbohm, Oscar Wilde, and W.B. Yeats, whose works
are placed in dialogue with authors who gained prominence during
this period. Bringing women's writing to the fore, Extraordinary
Aesthetes rebalances the achievements of artists and writers during
the rapidly transforming cultural world of the fin de siecle.
ADVANCE PRAISE FOR RENAISSANCE PORN STAR THE SAGA OF PIETRO
ARETINO: THE WORLD'S GREATEST HUSTLER Sex, drugs, and the Medicis.
A story of murder, revenge, art, pornography, and celebration with
an all-star cast of characters: Dante, Boccaccio, Machiavelli,
Michelangelo, a klatch of mafi a-don-style popes, and Shakespeare.
A tale that turns deep, deep erudition into exquisite sweets for
the heart and mind. -Howard Bloom, author of "The Genius of the
Beast: A Radical Re-Vision of Capitalism" If Jan Wenner had given
Hunter S. Thompson an assignment to write a historical essay of
Renaissance sexuality and literature, the resulting pages might
have looked something like "Renaissance Porn Star": raw,
uncensored, clearly mad, and quite brilliant. -Jess Winfi eld,
author of "My name is Will" Like a buried treasure unearthed,
"Renaissance Porn Star" sheds new light on how the Italian icon of
the Renaissance, Pietro Aretino, helped shape an awakened world.
Mark Lamonica mixes his amazing attention to historical detail and
breathes new life into Shakespeare. -Thelma Reyna, Ph.D. author of
"The Heavens Weep for Us" What art restoration has done for
paintings, Mark Lamonica has done through a historical account of
Pietro Aretino that wipes clean the whitewash of our puritanical
perspective on the Renaissance over the past several hundred years.
Not unlike a newly restored masterpiece, "Renaissance Porn Star" is
both beautiful and shocking. -Adam Hall, Shakespeare scholar Mark
Lamonica is an accomplished photographer and author of three highly
acclaimed books: "Junkyard Dogs and William Shakespeare" (1997);
co-author of "Rio LA: Tales from the Los Angeles River" (2001);
named "a best book of the year" by the Los Angeles Times Book
Review. "Whacking Buddha: The Mysterious World of Shakespeare and
Zen Buddhism" (2005); hailed as a work of "spiritual literary
dynamite." He is at work on a new book about the Devil.
One of the most troublesome questions about Utopia is Thomas More's
reason for writing it. Some of the ideas in it, such as the ease of
divorce, euthanasia and both married priests and female priests,
seem to be polar opposites of his beliefs and those expected of the
devout Catholic that he was. The concept of religious toleration
seems to jar particularly with the information we have about him as
Lord Chancellor: that he was a keen persecutor of Protestants.
Similarly, the criticism of lawyers comes from a writer who, as
Lord Chancellor, was arguably the most influential lawyer in
England.Wilder Publications is a green publisher. All of our books
are printed to order. This reduces waste and helps us keep prices
low while greatly reducing our impact on the environment.
Vasari's intellectual curiosity, enthusiasm, and artistic ability
made it possible for him to put forth a new perspective on art
which expresses a concern for success, a fascination for the
antique, and a delight for virtuosity depicted in his religious and
secular paintings. 192 pp.
The Italian Renaissance is a pivotal episode in the history of Western culture. Artists such as Masaccio, Donatello, and Fra Angelico created some of the most influential and exciting works in a variety of artistic fields at this time. Evelyn Welch presents a fresh picture of this period in the light of new scholarship and by recreating the experience of contemporary Italians - the patrons, the viewing public and the artists. The book discusses a wide range of works from across Italy, examines the issues of materials, workshop practices and artist-patron relationships, and explores the ways in which visual imagery related to contemporary sexual, social and political behaviour.
A fully illustrated survey of Early Netherlandish painting,
featuring all of the major artists, and many lesser-known painters.
This scarce antiquarian book is a selection from Kessinger
Publishing's Legacy Reprint Series. Due to its age, it may contain
imperfections such as marks, notations, marginalia and flawed
pages. Because we believe this work is culturally important, we
have made it available as part of our commitment to protecting,
preserving, and promoting the world's literature. Kessinger
Publishing is the place to find hundreds of thousands of rare and
hard-to-find books with something of interest for everyone!
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