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This book examines the work of US-born photographer Yasuhiro
Ishimoto (1921-2012) through its connections to Chicago, where he
lived for over a decade and returned to repeatedly throughout his
life. Long celebrated in Japan as one of the most influential
photographers of the twentieth century, Ishimoto also maintained
deep ties to his adopted home city of Chicago, where he arrived in
1945 after having been imprisoned in a US internment camp during
World War II. It was in Chicago that he developed his uniquely
modernist vision in two key ways. First, he created works that
engaged in important conversation with that of Laszlo Moholy-Nagy,
Harry Callahan, Aaron Siskind, and others at the historic Institute
of Design. Second, he immersed himself directly in the city's
neighborhoods, where he captured important social changes
reflective of broader shifts elsewhere in the United States. This
catalog--which accompanies an exhibition opening in September 2018
at the DePaul Art Museum--features both black-and-white and
full-color reproductions of key works by Ishimoto, as well as
in-depth essays by exhibition cocurators Jasmine Alinder and John
Tain.
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G.O.G. 666 (Paperback)
John Taine, Eric Temple Bell; Illustrated by John T. Brooks
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R785
Discovery Miles 7 850
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Ships in 10 - 17 working days
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Armchair fiction presents extra large paperback editions of the
best in classic science fiction novels. If lost worlds filled with
prehistoric monsters appeal to your adventurous side, then you
won't want to miss "The Greatest Adventure" by heralded sci-fi
author John Taine. They ripped the veil off the past. Dr. Eric
Lane's party of five crept across the frozen Antarctic seeking the
discovery of the ages. For this explorer-archeologist was following
the startling account of a sea captain who had fished a lifeless
organism from distant Antarctic waters-a devilish monstrosity that
was entirely unknown to the science of modern man. But upon close
scientific examination, Dr. Lane discovered this new species wasn't
something from Mother Nature. Its makeup and composition had all
the earmarks of some kind of wild genetic engineering, which left
Lane to beg the question: Had there once been intelligences on
Earth so much higher than our own that they could create new life
forms? But even with all his excitement, Dr. Lane was only
expecting to find fossils, and perhaps even some ruins. He did not
suspect-until too late-that he was opening a Pandora's box of
living horrors.
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Atmosphere
Taylor Jenkins Reid
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Discovery Miles 3 190
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Jean Tshibangu
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