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Books > Arts & Architecture > History of art / art & design styles > Art styles not limited by date > Oriental art
Selected papers from the 16th Conference of the
InternationalAssociation for Ladakh Studies (Heidelberg 17-20
April, 2013)1. Alchi Tsatsapuri: Notes on the History of an Early
Monumentby Andre Alexander;2. Lost and Gone Forever: Notes on the
Demolition of the Red Temple of Hunderby Noor Jahan Chunka and
Gerald Kozicz;3. Fortifications of Ladakh: A Brief Chrono-Typology
by Quentin Devers;4. The Munshi House in Leh: A Building History by
John Harrison;5. Castles and Defensive Architecture in Purig: An
Introduction, Survey andPreliminary Analysis by Neil Howard;6. The
Old Stupa of Matho by Gerald Kozicz;7. Visual Representation of
Ladakh and Zangskar in the British Library's WiseCollection by
Diana Lange;8. Siddhas and Sociality: A Seventeenth-Century Lay
Illustrated; Buddhist Manuscriptin Kumik Village, Zangskar (A
Preliminary Report) by Rob Linrothe;9. Trees-of-Life, Aquatic
Creatures and Other Enigmatic Motifs on Ladakhi WoodArt: What They
Tell Us About Art History by Heinrich Poll;10. The Life of Buddha
Sakyamuni in the Byams pa lha khang of Basgo, Ladakh byVerena
Ziegler.
The Taotie Image in Chinese Art, Culture, and Cosmology. The
taotie, also known as the "beast mask," is the most distinctive
feature of Shang dynasty art. It is a fascinating motif in Chinese
art and, for centuries, has inspired curiosity as to its meaning.
In this book, cultural scholar, Dave Alber, explores the many
meanings of the taotie image. What was the meaning of the taotie
among traditional Chinese art historians? What is the taotie's
influence in Chinese art history? What is the most probable
cultural origin of the taotie? What function did the taotie image
serve in Shang dynasty cosmology and psychology? What is the
Pan-Asian diffusion of the original motif? How does this art motif
enrich our experience of Chinese architecture, history, and
contemporary music? Dave Alber, MA originally presented the content
of this book as a lecture at Henan Polytechnic University (HPU) in
Mainland China. The Taotie Image in Chinese Art, Culture, and
Cosmology is written in dual-language English and Chinese. Thus, it
is a great tool for learning either English or Traditional Chinese.
With almost one hundred photographs from Dave Alber's travels in
China and Asia, it is also an ideal book for studying Chinese and
Pan-Asian art.
This book is the illustrated record of my trip of a lifetime to the
wonder and beauty of Bali, Indonesia. While attending Western
Michigan University I had the opportunity to go to Bali, Indonesia.
Even though I was only there for about 2 and a half weeks it still
inspires me to this day, thirteen years later the memories are
still vivid for me. I hope these images inspire and influence you
like they have for me. I chose to make this book into the format of
a comic book or graphic novel to make it readily assessable to
viewers. The images in the book are original photographs, personal
drawings and paintings manipulated with a comic book program.
Thanks for looking, Patrick B. Humphreys
Visualizing Modern China: Image, History, and Memory, 1750-Present
offers a sophisticated yet accessible interpretation of modern
Chinese history through visual imagery. With rich illustrations and
a companion website, it is an ideal textbook for college-level
courses on modern Chinese history and on modern visual culture. The
introduction provides a methodological framework and historical
overview, while the chronologically arranged chapters use engaging
case studies to explore important themes. Topics include: Qing
court ritual, rebellion and war, urban/rural relations, art and
architecture, sports, the Chinese diaspora, state politics, film
propaganda and censorship, youth in the Cultural Revolution,
environmentalism, and Internet culture. Companion website:
http://visualizingmodernchina.org
Science has played a crucial role in the initial stages of
westerners' collecting and studying ancient Chinese artworks and
archaeological materials. The relevant scientific data were quickly
generated using progressively sophisticated examination techniques.
But the task of integrating scientific data with archaeological and
art historical resources, and developing a workable
interdisciplinary study method, has lagged behind scientific
endeavor. Part One of this book explores the modes and functions of
the scientific resources available and their integration into
interdisciplinary study methods and models; pre-war researchers
particularly emphasized that their studies of Chinese
artistic/archaeological materials were scientific. Improvements in
precision and advanced specialization of examining instruments and
techniques resulted in substantively more detailed scientific data,
particularly in the post-war period. This brought with it new
research dimensions and increased knowledge of targeted samples,
and also greater challenges to the integration of interdisciplinary
study. In Part Two, Meili Yang establishes a feasible method of
interdisciplinary study in terms of five case studies related to
Chinese Song ceramics. Relevant data are provided and
professionally explained, resulting in critical new information
related to contemporary ceramic technologies. This technology
information leads us to the recognition of the uniqueness of each
single artwork and the artisan's individual intention and
critically, recognition of the close association with contemporary
society and culture at the time of manufacture. Utilizing this new
method of interdisciplinary study, modern science, ancient
technology, and art and society are seen to have explicit
connections. The author not only broadens scholars' and readers'
perspectives regarding ancient ceramic craft, but provides a
rigorous methodology applicable to interdisciplinary studies across
other disciplines.
![iEgoism (Paperback): Michael Andrew Law](//media.loot.co.za/images/x80/17735653697179215.jpg) |
iEgoism
(Paperback)
Michael Andrew Law
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R1,236
Discovery Miles 12 360
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Sixteenth-century wall paintings in a Buddhist temple in the
Tibetan cultural zone of northwest India are the focus of this
innovative and richly illustrated study. Initially shaped by one
set of religious beliefs, the paintings have since been
reinterpreted and retraced by a later Buddhist community, subsumed
within its religious framework and communal memory. Melissa Kerin
traces the devotional, political, and artistic histories that have
influenced the paintings' production and reception over the
centuries of their use. Her interdisciplinary approach combines art
historical methods with inscriptional translation, ethnographic
documentation, and theoretical inquiry to understand religious
images in context.
![Song Dong (Hardcover): Feng Boyi, Song Dong, Leng Lin, Barbara London, Sarina Tang, Philiippe Vergne](//media.loot.co.za/images/x80/358097573747179215.jpg) |
Song Dong
(Hardcover)
Feng Boyi, Song Dong, Leng Lin, Barbara London, Sarina Tang, …
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R659
R541
Discovery Miles 5 410
Save R118 (18%)
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Square meters of empty toothpaste tubes and bottles of cleaning
solution, pencils, balls of wool, or shoes—all of it in neat
rows: Waste not, the spectacular installation by Song Dong (*1966)
comprising more than ten thousand individual items, traveled around
the whole world, inspiriting countless exhibition visitors. The
artist’s mother fell into poverty during the Cultural Revolution
and compulsively collected everyday objects. The installation
arranges everything she accumulated, cataloguing and documenting
her life.This is the first volume to provide insight into all of
the series of works by the Conceptual artist in which he deals with
issues such as consumption, sustainability, memory, or
spirituality. Song Dong arranges old doors and windows from
demolished buildings to create new living spaces. In Doing Nothing
Garden at documenta 12, he transformed a mountain of garbage into
an attractive recreation area, or he recreates modern cityscapes
out of candy: Eating the City —unhealthy, but yummy. Taking a
bite is allowed! Exhibitions: Groninger Museum, Netherlands, 13.6.
– 1.11.2015 | Kunsthalle Düsseldorf, 5.12.2015 – 6.3.2016
"Impressive, exhaustive, labyrinthine, and obsessive--"The Anime
Encyclopedia" is an astonishing piece of work."--Neil Gaiman
Over one thousand new entries . . . over four thousand updates .
. . over one million words. . .
This third edition of the landmark reference work has six
additional years of information on Japanese animation, its
practitioners and products, plus incisive thematic entries on anime
history and culture. With credits, links, cross-references, and
content advisories for parents and libraries.
Watch for the e-book edition in December 2014, ISBN
9781611729092, $24.95
Jonathan Clements has been an editor of "Manga Max" and a
contributing editor of "Newtype USA."
Helen McCarthy was founding editor of "Anime UK" and editor of
"Manga Mania."
In this generously illustrated volume, the distinguished teacher,
author, and critic Joyce Brodsky brings together works by the
expatriate Chinese painter Yun Gee and his Chinese American
daughter, Li-lan, exploring connections between each artist's life
and paintings. Yun Gee (1906-1963) was born in China, emigrated as
a young man to San Francisco, and after living there and in Paris,
spent the latter part of his life in New York City. Li-lan was born
in New York to Yun Gee and Helen Wimmer Gee. She still lives and
works in and near the city of her birth but has also spent long
periods in Japan and more recently in China. Father and daughter
alike exemplify the desire to live and work in freedom from the
restrictions of national identity, a choice that permits openness
to different cultures. For Yun Gee and Li-lan, this openness was
never a reflection of trends in the art world but was an element of
life itself, fully embraced and therefore embodied in each artist's
paintings. Both artists can be understood as cosmopolitan and
transnational figures - citizens, in Homi Bhabha's terms, of
contemporary culture's "middle passage." This book, then, although
not primarily theoretical, is informed by ideas of hybridity,
transnationalism, and cosmopolitanism. As artists who have embraced
multinational, multicultural, and multiracial experiences, Yun Gee
and Li-lan have combined those experiences intrinsically, sometimes
in spite of the pain that such a complex passage may entail. Li-lan
was exposed to Yun Gee's paintings and his cultural sophistication
when she was a child, and this exposure was crucial to her artistic
being. In turn, she has broadened and deepened the audience for her
father's art through her archival work, her conservation of and her
efforts to encourage exhibitions of his work. For more about Li-lan
visit: http://www.li-lan.com
Japanese POP and CONTEMPORARY Art. For a number of years, the key
phrase "Cool Japan" has gained popularrity around the world. The
art, fashion, animation, cuisine and architecture that we Japanese
have long taken for granted have beenlatched on to as new and
exciting by consumers around the world. Arttists introduced here by
BOOM are all contemporary art makers currently working in Japan.
They vary in technique and age, and essentially have no common
theme or genre. However, the one thread that links all of these
artists is that, in this ever changing era, they continue to
conceive and pursue new and unique methods of expression in their
work. In every sense they are "artists living in the NOW." Through
BOOM we hope audiences will experience that special "something"
that is found in the very DNA of the Japanese people. That je ne
sais quoi which has its basis in the traditions of Japanese art and
is only emphasized through the expression and craftsmanship of the
individual artists presented. These contemporary artists are the
true life-breath of their generation. our greatest hope is that
this volume may inspire an interest in both these extraordinary
artists and their art.
Modern Arab Art provides a historical and theoretical overview of
the subject from the 1940s through today. With particular emphasis
on production, reception, and the intersection between art and
politics in Iraq and Palestine, Nada Shabout reveals the fallacy in
Western fascination with Arab art as a timeless and exotic "other."
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