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The classic international bestseller - a marvellously exciting and
stimulating look at the emergence and development of Western
civilisation Kenneth Clark's sweeping narrative looks at how
Western Europe evolved in the wake of the collapse of the Roman
Empire, to produce the ideas, books, buildings, works of art and
great individuals that make up our civilisation. The author takes
us from Iona in the ninth century to France in the twelfth, from
Florence to Urbino, from Germany to Rome, England, Holland and
America. Against these historical backgrounds he sketches an
extraordinary cast of characters - the men and women who gave new
energy to civilisation and expanded our understanding of the world
and of ourselves. He also highlights the works of genius they
produced - in architecture, sculpture and painting, in philosophy,
poetry and music, and in science and engineering, from Raphael's
School of Athens to the bridges of Brunel.
In February 1972 Henry Moore's sculpture studios in the English
countryside at Much Hadham were filled with the preparations for
his retrospective exhibition at Florence. In search of peace and
quiet, he went into a smaller room overlooking the fields where a
local farmer grazed his sheep. The sheep came very close to the
window, attracting his attention, and he began to draw them.
Initially he saw them as nothing more than four-legged balls of
wool, but his vision changed as he explored what they were really
like - the way they moved, the shape of their bodies under the
fleece. They also developed strong human and biblical associations,
and the sight of a ewe with her lamb evoked the mother-and-child
theme - a large form sheltering a small one - which has been
important to Henry Moore in all his work. He drew the sheep again
that summer after they were shorn, when he could see the shapes of
the bodies which had been covered by wool. Solid in form, sudden
and vigorous in movement, Henry Moore's sheep are created through a
network of swirling and zigzagging lines in the rapid and (in
Moore's hands) sensitive medium of ballpoint pen. The effect is
both familiar and monumental; as Lor
Originally published in 1939, this book contains a series of
unfinished lectures written by Roger Fry, the Slade Professor of
Fine Arts at the University of Cambridge. Fry's lectures cover a
wide range of artistic styles, from the art of Ancient Greece and
Egypt to American and Chinese art, as well as a review of art
history as an academic study. The text is accompanied by over three
hundred photographic plates of many important artworks. This book
will be of value to anyone with an interest in art history.
From the art of the Greeks to that of Renoir and Moore, this
work surveys the ever-changing fashions in what has constituted the
ideal nude as a basis of humanist form.
On December 4, 1906, on Cornell University's campus, seven black
men founded one of the greatest and most enduring organizations in
American history. Alpha Phi Alpha Fraternity Inc. has brought
together and shaped such esteemed men as Martin Luther King Jr.,
Cornel West, Thurgood Marshall, Wes Moore, W. E. B. DuBois, Roland
Martin, and Paul Robeson. "Born in the shadow of slavery and on the
lap of disenfranchisement," Alpha Phi Alpha -- like other black
Greek-letter organizations -- was founded to instill a spirit of
high academic achievement and intellectualism, foster meaningful
and lifelong ties, and racially uplift those brothers who would be
initiated into its ranks. In Alpha Phi Alpha, Gregory S. Parks,
Stefan M. Bradley, and other contributing authors analyze the
fraternity and its members' fidelity to the founding precepts set
forth in 1906. They discuss the identity established by the
fraternity at its inception, the challenges of protecting the image
and brand, and how the organization can identify and train future
Alpha men to uphold the standards of an outstanding African
American fraternity. Drawing on organizational identity theory and
a diverse array of methodologies, the authors raise and answer
questions that are relevant not only to Alpha Phi Alpha but to all
black Greek-letter organizations.
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Last Lectures (Paperback)
Roger Fry; Introduction by Kenneth Clark
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R1,094
Discovery Miles 10 940
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Ships in 10 - 15 working days
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The White Pine Series Of Architectural Monographs, V13, No. 6.
Edited By Russell F. Whitehead.
According to the scant historical records available, Uncle Bud
Long, his daughter Janey, and her son Frankie lived near Clark's
Landing, Kentucky, for about twenty years early in this century.
Mr. Clarke has collected the tales of the Longs' strange ways from
old-time residents of the community, both those who knew the Longs
and those who inherited the stories by word of mouth. Here he
skillfully weaves them into a loose narrative and, in addition,
analyzes the ways in which the anecdotes have been transmuted in
the process of retelling. This analysis of the stories of Uncle Bud
reveals much about the delicate process by which the oral folk
tradition grows and thrives. Though at first glance these
fragmentary anecdotes hardly seem to constitute a legend, Mr.
Clarke convincingly argues that from such humble roots ultimately
grows much of what we think of as "literature."
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Last Lectures (Hardcover)
Roger Fry; Introduction by Kenneth Clark
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R1,384
Discovery Miles 13 840
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Ships in 10 - 15 working days
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A photo journey of earth's closest neighbor. Newly released
pictures that show we are not alone in the universe.
In 1966 a young Army lieutenant from small-town Oklahoma set foot
in the Central Highlands of Vietnam as a raw, inexperienced Huey
pilot. Ray Clark would serve two harrowing tours in Vietnam,
developing his piloting skills in combat. Clark has written an
engrossing, poignant, and often humorous account of America's
combat helicopter pilots and crew members: their adventures,
triumphs and tragedies as they fought in a war like no other in
America's history. A natural and masterful storyteller, Clark
shares a personal memoir of war that Americans should heed
carefully. Just Let Me Walk Away is a chronicle of a defining point
in U.S. history, a tale of an unpopular war and the soldiers
charged to fight it. This riveting, personal story is written with
passion, dignity, and a commitment to truth. A day in the life of
these American veterans is a story largely untold, an uncelebrated
truth that Clark is compelled to reveal.
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