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Books > Arts & Architecture > Art forms, treatments & subjects > Art treatments & subjects > Individual artists
Flower painter Pierre-Joseph Redoute (1759-1840) devoted himself
exclusively to capturing the diversity of flowering plants in
watercolor paintings which were then published as copper
engravings, with careful botanical descriptions. The darling of
wealthy Parisian patrons including Napoleon's wife Josephine, he
was dubbed "the Raphael of flowers," and is regarded to this day as
a master of botanical illustration. This collection brings our
best-selling XL-sized edition to a smaller, more convenient format,
still gathering some of the finest color engravings from Redoute's
illustrations of Roses, Lilies, and Choix des plus belles fleurs et
quelques branches des plus beaux fruits (Selection of the Most
Beautiful Blooms and Branches with the Finest Fruits). Offering a
vibrant overview of Redoute's admixture of accuracy and beauty, it
is also a privileged glimpse into the magnificent gardens and
greenhouses of a bygone Paris. About the series TASCHEN is 40!
Since we started our work as cultural archaeologists in 1980,
TASCHEN has become synonymous with accessible publishing, helping
bookworms around the world curate their own library of art,
anthropology, and aphrodisia at an unbeatable price. Today we
celebrate 40 years of incredible books by staying true to our
company credo. The 40 series presents new editions of some of the
stars of our program-now more compact, friendly in price, and still
realized with the same commitment to impeccable production.
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Wifredo Lam: The Imagination at Work
(Hardcover)
Wifredo Lam; Foreword by Alexander Alberro; Text written by Kaira Cabanas, Samantha A. Noel, Alexandra Chang; Contributions by …
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R1,321
R1,127
Discovery Miles 11 270
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One of the most distinctive voices in mainstream comics since
the 1970s, Howard Chaykin (b. 1950) has earned a reputation as a
visionary formal innovator and a compelling storyteller whose
comics offer both pulp-adventure thrills and thoughtful engagement
with real-world politics and culture. His body of work is defined
by the belief that comics can be a vehicle for sophisticated adult
entertainment and for narratives that utilize the medium's unique
properties to explore serious themes with intelligence and wit.
Beginning with early interviews in fanzines and concluding with
a new interview conducted in 2010 with the volume's editor, "Howard
Chaykin: Conversations" collects widely ranging discussions from
Chaykin's earliest days as an assistant for such legends as Gil
Kane and Wallace Wood to his recent work on titles including
"Dominic Fortune," "Challengers of the Unknown," and "American
Century." The book includes 35 line illustrations selected from
Chaykin, as well. As a writer/artist for outlets such as DC Comics,
Marvel Comics, and "Heavy Metal," he has participated in and
influenced many of the major developments in mainstream comics over
the past four decades. He was an early pioneer in the graphic novel
format in the 1970s, and his groundbreaking sci-fi satire "American
Flagg " was an essential contribution to the maturation of the
comic book as a vehicle for social commentary in the 1980s.
The sixteen studies in this book include six specially translated
from Greek and another two published here for the first time. They
deal with the art of painting in Crete at a time when the island
was under Venetian rule. The main emphasis is on the 15th century
and especially on the painter Angelos. More than thirty icons with
his signature survive, and at least twenty more can be reliably
attributed to him. Angelos was the most significant artist of a
particularly significant era. It was at this time that the centre
of artistic production migrated from Constantinople, the capital of
the Byzantine Empire to Candia, the capital of Venetian-occupied
Crete. These studies try to reconstruct the personality of this
late Byzantine painter, Angelos, not only through his icons but
also through his will (1436), now in the State Archives in Venice.
In this context they also explore the status of the Cretan painter
in society. The large number of extant Cretan icons clearly
indicates the striking increase in production from the 15th century
onwards. Similarly, archival documents are used to examine the
trade of icons in Crete and the way Cretan artists had to organize
their workshops in order to meet the requirements of the market.
This title was first published in 1980: Drawing upon released
documents, memoirs and party-history works, the process and impact
of the political campaigns in China between 1950 and 1965 is
documented. Complete with extensive interviews with Chinese
scholars and former officials, the book reviews the findings of the
first edition.
When we think Tom of Finland we first picture muscular, macho young
men in military gear. Tom's vision of masculine perfection was
formed during his service as an officer during World War II. Though
he served in the Finnish air force, it was the German troops,
stationed in Finland to help the country repel invading Russian
forces, which served as inspiration. After all, only the Germans
had uniforms created by Hugo Boss, tightly tailored, replete with
designer touches, and complimented by high, shiny black leather
boots. Tom, at 19, was smitten, an obsession that deepened
following his first sexual experiences with German officers in the
blackout streets of Helsinki. Tom began putting his military
fantasies on paper in 1945 to memorialize his thrilling nighttime
encounters when the war ended. At first the Hugo Boss uniforms
dominated, but as the years and then decades passed he included
American naval uniforms as well, and then his own hybridized
designs of black leather, jodhpurs, boots, and peaked caps, with
military insignia replaced by Tom's Men patches. As Tom attracted
an army of loyal fans, he created, with pencil, pen and gouache, an
army of free, proud, masculine fantasy men committed to pleasure
and male camaraderie. The Little Book of Tom: Military Men explores
Tom's fascination with militaria through a mixture of multi-panel
comics and single-panel drawings and paintings, all in a compact
and affordable 192 pages. Historic film stills and posters,
personal photos of Tom, sketches, and Tom's own reference images
explore the cultural context and private inspirations behind the
ultimate Tom of Finland hero.
This book draws a comparison between two of the most prominent
Jewish artists in the twentieth-century: Polish-born magician
story-teller Isaac Bashevis-Singer (1904-1991) and Russian-born
creator of visual magic Marc Chagall (1887-1985). In addition to
their East European Jewish background both were exposed to Western
culture. Chagall absorbed such turn-of-the-century avant-garde
styles as Expressionism, Fauvism, Cubism, Abstract Art, Surrealism;
from these he created a unique blend, to which he brought the
various Russian influences he had absorbed and his own special
highly imaginative and inventive personal style. Bashevis-Singer
brought to his works philosophical, psychological, scientific,
medical and legal knowledge. While both artists were affected by
these Western influences, they remained firmly entrenched within
the Jewish culture - the Yiddish language and life in the "shtetl"
- from which they drew their inspiration. Their world consisted of
a special blend of reality and dream, realism and fantasy. Ruth
Dorot demonstrates that they shared, albeit unwittingly, a common
"meta-realistic" style combining the earthly with the supernatural
and the transcendental. Their works allude to real place names,
dates, facts and historical events; but at the same time contain
occult forces, angels, demons, mysticism and mystery. Comparisons
range over the Jewish "shtetl", Jewish artists, Love and Despair,
the Holocaust and war, religion and mysticism. In the works of both
artists, hope springs eternal; it is a hope emanating from the
mystical realm of life as it relates to the magic of creation and
the cosmic logic of the Creator. Artist and story-teller sail
between hard-core reality and the yearning for redemption, between
Judaism and universal values, between exile and revelation.
The Japanese artist Kawanabe Kyosai (1831-1889) was celebrated for
his exciting impromptu performances at calligraphy and painting
parties. Dynamic, playful and provocative, Kyosai delighted his
audience with spontaneous and speedy paintings of demons,
skeletons, deities and Buddhist saints. These were often satirical,
reflecting a time of political and cultural change in Japan. Among
his most charming and inventive works are his brilliant depictions
of animals, which humorously play the roles of protagonists of
modern life. Kyosai's important place in Japanese art is here
explored in depth by Sadamura Koto, a leading authority on the
artist, in this catalogue of the exceptionally rich holdings of the
Israel Goldman Collection.
Born near the Tuscan province of Lucca in 1815, Domenico Brucciani
became the most important and prolific maker of plaster casts in
nineteenth-century Britain. This first substantive study shows how
he and his business used public exhibitions, emerging museum
culture and the nationalisation of art education to monopolise the
market for reproductions of classical and contemporary sculpture.
Based in Covent Garden in London, Brucciani built a network of
fellow Italian emigre formatori and collaborated with other makers
of facsimiles-including Elkington the electrotype manufacturers,
Copeland the makers of Parian ware and Benjamin Cheverton with his
sculpture reducing machine-to bring sculpture into the spaces of
learning and leisure for as broad a public as possible. Brucciani's
plaster casts survive in collections from North America to New
Zealand, but the extraordinary breadth of his practice-making death
masks of the famous and infamous, producing pioneering casts of
anatomical, botanical and fossil specimens and decorating dance
halls and theatres across Britain-is revealed here for the first
time. By making unprecedented use of the nineteenth-century
periodical press and dispersed archival sources, Domenico Brucciani
and the Formatori of Nineteenth-Century Britain establishes the
significance of Brucciani's sculptural practice to the visual and
material cultures of Victorian Britain and beyond.
A fully updated and expanded edition of the definitive study of
Phoebe Anna Traquair. This is a compelling account of the life and
career of Phoebe Anna Traquair, a leading figure in Britain's Arts
and Crafts movement. The new edition features new research about
her artistic practice, materials and technique as well as her
intellectual life, including her correspondence with John Ruskin.
Her total commitment to the place of art in her daily life is
revealed alongside new details on her family and social life.
Traquair was remarkable for her openness to all types of art, and
worked in a range of media including embroidery, enamels,
illuminated manuscripts and murals. This new edition features 120
illustrations including new discoveries, as well as some of her
most famous and best-loved works. Beautifully illustrated and
featuring the artist's own words, this book is at once a
fascinating biography and an artistic study of one of Scotland's
first professional women artists.
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Three Ideophones
Goodiepal, Alejandra Salinas, Aeron Bergman
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R638
Discovery Miles 6 380
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Ships in 12 - 19 working days
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The first biography of Anne Damer since 1908, The Life of Anne
Damer: Portrait of a Regency Artist, by Jonathan Gross, draws on
Damer s notebooks and previously unpublished letters to explore the
life and legacy of England s first significant female sculptor.
Best known for her portraits of dogs and other animals, Damer also
created busts of England s most important political heroes,
sometimes within days or hours of their historical accomplishments.
This in-depth biography traces her life during the American
Revolution, the French Revolution, the Peace of Amiens and the
Hundred Days. Damer was convinced that art could have significant
political influence, sending her bust of Nelson to the King of
Tanjore to encourage trade with India. Her art stands at the
transition between neoclassicism and romanticism and provides a
wealth of insight into 19th century British sculpture. In the last
twenty years, there has been a strong revival of interest in Damer
s life, particularly in gay and lesbian studies due to her famous
relationship with author Mary Berry. This text serves as a deeper
investigation of this fascinating and important figure of British
art history. The emotional menage a trois of Anne Damer, Mary
Berry, and Horace Walpole forms the heart of this new biography.
Gross contends that all three individuals, had they led more
conventional lives, would never have given the world the literary
and artistic gifts they bestowed in the form of Strawberry Hill,
Belmour, and Fashionable Friends. The struggles they faced will
encourage modern readers to appreciate anew the fluidity of sexual
identity and passionate friendship, as well as the restraints put
in place by society to control them. Anne Damer s life has much to
teach a new generation concerned with the complex relationship
between love, art, and politics. The Life of Anne Damer will
interest historians of Georgian England, and readers in the fine
arts, literature, and history.
Barbara Earl Thomas's new body of work carries within it the
sediments of history and grapples with race and the color line. At
the heart of it lies a story of life and death, hope and
resilience-a child's survival. With her quietly glowing portraits
of young Black boys and girls, Thomas puts before us the humble
question: can we see, and be present to, the humanity, the trust,
the hopes and dreams of each of these children? The Geography of
Innocence offers a reexamination of Black portraiture and the
preconceived dichotomies of innocence and guilt and sin and
redemption, and the ways in which these notions are assigned and
distorted along cultural and racial lines. Two interconnected
visual arguments unfold: a portrait gallery of children from the
artist's extended community and an illuminated environment that
appears like a delicate paper lantern. To accompany the visual
elements, the book's essays examine Thomas's work in the context of
different art historical portraiture traditions and political
relevance. Thomas also contributes an interview and an essay
reflecting on the current climate in which the work exists.
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Bjoerk
(Paperback)
Bjork; Text written by Klaus Biesenbach, Alex Ross, Nicola Dibben, Timothy Morton, …
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R1,777
R1,502
Discovery Miles 15 020
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John James Audubon is arguably America's most widely recognized and
collected artist. His Birds of America has been reproduced often,
beginning with the double elephant folio printed by Havill in
England, followed by a much smaller "Octavo" edition printed in
Philadelphia and sold by subscription. After Audubon's death, his
family arranged with the New York printer Julius Bien to produce
another elephant folio edition, this time by the new
chromolithographic process. It too would be sold by subscription,
but the venture, begun in 1858, was brought to an abrupt end by the
Civil War. Only 150 plates were produced, and the number remaining
today is slight; they are among the rarest and most sought after
Audubon prints. Bound in cloth with a full cloth slipcase, this
beautifully produced book is the first complete reproduction of
Bien chromolithographs and will become the centerpiece of any bird
lover's library.
Taking Freud's seminal essay A Childhood Memory of Leonardo da
Vinci as his starting point and opposite, Hubert Damisch uses the
preposition 'by' instead of 'of' in the title of his book to
indicate that he is searching for a way of doing psychoanalysis
with art that does not amount to psychobiography. The book is in
some respects a parody of Freud's work on art. The return to Freud
was necessary because work in psychoanalysis and art has not solved
the problem of what is being analyzed. Damisch studies Piero della
Francesca's painting Madonna del Parto as a construction by the
artist of what viewers throughout history may have pursued on the
basis of their unconscious fantasies involving what Freud
considered the most characteristic question of human beings: where
do children come from, and how did they get there?
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Raphael
(Paperback)
Paul Joannides
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R565
R500
Discovery Miles 5 000
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An authoritative introduction to one of the most influential
painters in the history of art, written by the pre-eminent
authority on the subject and informed by the latest research. More
versatile and less idiosyncratic than Michelangelo, more prolific
and accessible than his mentor Leonardo da Vinci, Raphael, though
he died at only thirty-seven, is considered the single most
influential artist of the Renaissance. Here, art historian Paul
Joannides explores the different social and regional contexts of
Raphael's work and discusses all aspects of his artistic output. He
traces Raphael's career from his origins in Urbino, through his
altarpieces made in Umbria in the shadow of Perugino, to the first
flowering of his genius in Florence where he painted a series of
iconic Madonnas that are among the most beloved images in Western
art. Raphael's employment by the dynamic and demanding Pope Julius
II gave him opportunities without parallel and encouraged the full
expansion of his genius. As a sophisticate entrepreneur, he
dominated Rome's artistic life and extended the range of his
activities to that of architect, designer, pioneer archaeologist
and theoretician. The foundation of Raphael's versatility and range
was his supreme clarity of mind as a draughtsman. Knowledge of his
drawings, on which Joannides is a leading expert, is central to
understanding of his achievement, and they are thoroughly explored
here.
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