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Books > Arts & Architecture > Art forms, treatments & subjects > Prints & printmaking > General
In Early Modern Thesis Prints in the Southern Netherlands,
Gwendoline de Muelenaere offers an account of the practice of
producing illustrated thesis prints in the seventeenth-century
Southern Low Countries. She argues that the evolution of the thesis
print genre gave rise to the creation of a specific visual language
combining efficiently various figurative registers of a historical
and symbolic nature. The book offers a reflection on the
representation of knowledge and its public recognition in the
context of academic defenses. Early Modern Thesis Prints makes a
timely contribution to our understanding of early modern print
culture and more specifically to the expanding field of study
concerned with the role of visual materials in early modern
thought.
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Mauricio Lasansky
(Paperback)
American Federation of Arts; Carl 1891-1975 Zigrosser, Mauricio 1914- Lasansky
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R407
Discovery Miles 4 070
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Ships in 18 - 22 working days
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Catalogue of Rare Lacquers, Paintings, Prints, Porcelains, Bronzes, Embroideries, Ivory Carvings, Crystal Ball, Swords and Sword Ornaments, Ancient Palace Screens, Buddhist Statuettes, Etc., Etc.
- Belonging to Messrs. Yamanaka & Co. of Osaka, Japan, ...
(Paperback)
American Art Association
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R473
Discovery Miles 4 730
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Ships in 18 - 22 working days
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Everett Ruess was twenty years old when he vanished into the
canyonlands of southern Utah, spawning the myth of a romantic
desert wanderer that survives to this day. It was 1934, and Ruess
was in the fifth year of a quest to record wilderness beauty in
works of art whose value was recognized by such contemporary
artists as Dorothea Lange, Ansel Adams, and Edward Weston. From his
home in Los Angeles, Ruess walked, hitchhiked, and rode burros up
the California coast, along the crest of the Sierra Nevada, and
into the deserts of the Southwest. In the first probing biography
of Everett Ruess, acclaimed environmental historian Philip L.
Fradkin goes beyond the myth to reveal the realities of Ruess's
short life and mysterious death and finds in the artist's
astonishing afterlife a lonely hero who persevered.
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