|
Showing 1 - 5 of
5 matches in All Departments
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.
|
J.D. Fergusson (Paperback)
Alice Strang, Elizabeth Cumming, Sheila McGregor
|
R474
R379
Discovery Miles 3 790
Save R95 (20%)
|
Ships in 12 - 17 working days
|
J. D. Fergusson (1874-1961) is one of the four artists known as the
Scottish Colourists, the others being F. C. B. Cadell, G. L. Hunter
and S. J. Peploe. Fergusson was born in Leith, and was essentially
a self-taught artist. In Paris 1907 he became involved with the
avant-garde scene and exhibited at the progressive Salon d'Automne.
More than any of his Scottish contemporaries, Fergusson assimilated
and developed the latest developments in French painting. In 1913
Fergusson met the dance pioneer Margaret Morris (1891-1980).
Morris's creative dance movements and her students continued to be
one of Fergusson's main sources of inspiration and models. In 1929
Fergusson returned to Paris where he was involved with the
Anglo-American art circles. Most summers were spent in the south of
France where Morris held her celebrated Summer Schools. The couple
moved to Glasgow in 1939 being founder members of the New Art Club
and of its off-shoot the New Scottish Group. This book reasserts
the artist's place at the forefront of British modernism.
Lois De Groot has "various ambitions," and she means to follow them
where they take her, even if it means breaking a few hearts and a
few rules along the way. Follow Lois's adventures through love and
life in this 1895 novel for young ladies, part of "The Girl Chum's
Series" of instructive, uplifting, and "charming stories for young
girls, well told and full of interest. Their simplicity,
tenderness, healthy, interesting motives, vigorous action, and
character painting will please all girl readers." Readers of retro
fiction and students of the history of children's literature will
find this a treat. ELIZABETH CUMMINGS is also the author of The
Story of an Artist and Miss Matilda Archambeau Van Dorn.
United in promoting the superiority of 'honest' design and natural
materials in an industrial age, the Arts and Crafts movement
included architects, artists and designers as stylistically and
geographically diverse as William Morris, Frank Lloyd Wright, Josef
Hoffmann and Eliel Saarinen, and exerted a wide international
influence which is today more relevant than ever.
|
|