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Books > Arts & Architecture > Art forms, treatments & subjects > Sculpture & other three-dimensional art forms > Sculpture
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Karl Bitter
- a Biography
(Paperback)
Ferdinand 1868-1954 Schevill; Created by National Sculpture Society (U S. )., Karl Theodore Francis 1867-1 Bitter
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R500
Discovery Miles 5 000
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Ships in 10 - 15 working days
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Sokunge (As If)
(Paperback)
Masimba Hwati; Designed by Baynham Goredema; Interview by Ryan Chokureva
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R871
Discovery Miles 8 710
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Ships in 10 - 15 working days
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Netsuke - classic belt decorations for men - are rooted in a
historical, mythological and artistic tradition in Japanese
culture. Woodcarvers and their pupils, even counterfeiters,
continued the work of their role models, in copies or variants of
what came before them, and even created major works of art with the
smallest of dimensions. Since the opening up of Japan in 1853, the
miniature works have gained appreciation, and enthusiasts are found
all over the world. Today netsuke are still being created in a
great variety of motifs. Netsuke in Comparison presents one hundred
netsuke from a private collection. For the very first time, it
endeavours to juxtapose them with comparative images from
collections and literature in order to locate them within this
genre and to convey something of their diversity and
expressiveness. Text in English and German.
Alberto Giacometti's attenuated figures of the human form are among
the most significant artistic images of the 20th century. Sartre,
Breton, and Winnicott are just some of the great thinkers who have
drawn upon the graceful, harrowing work of Giacometti, which has
continued to resonate with artists, writers, and audiences. In this
book, Timothy Mathews explores the themes of fragility, trauma,
space, and relationality in Giacometti's art and the texts that
respond or refer to them: the novels of W.G. Sebald, Samuel Beckett
and Cees Nooteboom, and the theories of Bertolt Brecht, which
recasts the iconic L'Homme qui marche as Walter Benjamin's Angel of
History. During his lifelong quest to represent the human form, and
to locate the humanity at the heart of conflicting conceptions of
modernity, Giacometti returned to the key notions of depth and
flatness, memory and attachment, through his sculptures and
writings. Both a critical study of Giacometti's life and work, and
an investigation of their affective power, this book asks what
encounters with Giacometti's pieces can tell us about the history
of our own time, and our ways of looking; about the nature of human
attachment, and the humility of relating to art.
Italian sculptor Davide Rivalta seeks out wild animals in their
natural habitat and in captivity, then creates sculptures in bronze
that capture their energy, otherness, and power. This book
documents an exhibition at the Forte di Belvedere in Florence,
where Rivalta turns the gallery and garden into a savannah with
life-size buffalos, eagles, wolves, and a rhinoceros. Site-specific
wall drawings of large birds highlight another artistic practice
that the artist uses to explore the untamed essence of the animal
world. His works are on show in permanent exhibitions in various
cities, both in Italy and abroad, and have been shown in many art
galleries and museums.
The nineteen papers in this volume stem from a symposium that
brought together academics, archaeologists, museum curators,
conservators, and a practicing marble sculptor to discuss varying
approaches to restoration of ancient stone sculptures.
Contributors and their subjects include Marion True and Jerry
Podany on changing approaches to conservation; Seymour Howard on
restoration and the antique model; Nancy H. Ramage's case study on
the relationship between a restorer, Vincenzo Pacetti, and his
patron, Luciano Bonaparte; Mette Moltesen on de-restoring and
re-restoring in the Ny Carlsberg Glyptotek; Miranda Marvin on the
Ludovisi collection; and Andreas Scholl on the history of
restoration of ancient sculptures in the Altes Museum in
Berlin.
The book also features contributions by Elizabeth Bartman,
Brigitte Bourgeois, Jane Fejfer, Angela Gallottini, Sascha
Kansteiner, Giovanna Martellotti, Orietta Rossi Pinelli, Peter
Rockwell, Edmund Southworth, Samantha Sportun, and Markus Trunk.
Charles Rhyne summarizes the themes, approaches, issues, and
questions raised by the symposium.
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