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Showing 1 - 9 of
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Inside Pompeii
Luigi Spina
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R2,073
Discovery Miles 20 730
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Ships in 12 - 17 working days
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A visually stunning, intimate photographic tour of Pompeii’s
spaces, including many that have never been seen by the public.
Pompeii, one of the most astonishing and well-preserved sites of
classical antiquity, is also one of the world’s most visited
architectural sites. This lavish volume takes readers on a tour of
Pompeii through an array of visually compelling and original
photographs by Italian artist Luigi Spina. Produced in partnership
with the Parco Archeologico di Pompei, readers are expertly guided
through the Roman city’s nine districts, including many hidden
corners that are inaccessible to most visitors. Pompeii’s
architecture is a central feature of the images, which were shot at
all times of day, in all seasons, and in natural light. Lacy
peristyles and rows of column fragments give way to intimate,
atmospheric interior spaces. Mosaic floors and beautiful – albeit
fragmentary – wall paintings are reproduced with stunning
fidelity and sensitivity. The book also includes an essay by
Gabriel Zuchtriegel, director of the Pompeii archaeological park,
and several meditations on the history, architecture and natural
beauty of the city. Inside Pompeii provides the wondrous experience
of wandering through this remarkable site without ever leaving
home.
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Inside Pompeii
Luigi Spina
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R3,070
Discovery Miles 30 700
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Ships in 12 - 17 working days
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This volume is a continuation of the first instalment of the
editorial project Canova | In Four Tempos, ISBN 9788874399215, born
in co-edition with the Pallavicino Foundation in Genoa with the
goal of collecting in a refined publication the photographic
research of Luigi Spina focused on the plaster models by Antonio
Canova almost entirely preserved at the plaster cast gallery in
Possagno. This project accompanying the four-year Canovian
celebrations (2019-2022) is structured in four publications, each
focused on a specific nucleus of plaster models. Its aim is to give
new dignity to Antonio Canova's creative process while highlighting
the fundamental role of the bronze nails (reperes) that made the
metamorphoses from plaster model to marble sculpture possible. The
first volume is devoted to the dialogue of Myth and Faith,
illustrated by Spina with photographs of Cupid and Psyche, Paolina
Borghese Bonaparte, Venus and Mars, the Lying Magdalen, Peace, and
the Lamentation of Christ, while this, the second volume, revolves
mainly around Myth. The sculptures on which the visual narrative
focuses are: Dancer with Finger on Chin, Dedalus and Icarus,
Theseus Defeats the Centaur, Naiad, Pius VII Praying, Venus and
Adonis, and Sleeping Nymph.
This book offers a review of Matteo Pugliese's art over the past 20
years. The figures the Milanese sculptor creates are distinguished
by their great power, revealing an inner torment that can no longer
be disguised. The men depicted in his sculptures are all trying to
break free of the wall that holds them, to throw off their
limitations and assert their value as individuals in the hopes of
escaping from dull uniformity and social and family expectations.
These are people who are attempting to achieve a painful rebirth by
struggling against materialised restraint - a wall - that seeks to
prevent them expressing themselves, growing and therefore existing.
The artist chooses to portray the moment of greatest effort, of
supreme tension, the instant when a man regains control of his life
and struggles against what is holding him trapped so as to restore
a sense of purpose in his life. The carefully studied poses of his
figures recall ancient models, in the same way as the material from
which they are fashioned is also ancient. Luigi Spina's lens
knowingly lingers on these figures' troubled birth and enables the
reader, admirer, and art historian to acquire an intimate
understanding of the sculpture and even to feel a part of the
travails and manifest vulnerability that grip all of humanity. Text
in English and Italian.
This publication was designed to celebrate the 50th anniversary of
the discovery of the Riace Bronzes. In it, Luigi Spina's
photographic research dialogues with the texts written by Carmelo
Malacrino. The photographer here develops a continued narrative,
offering a direct comparison between the two sculptures, identified
as A and B, exploring interpretations of the physicality of the two
subjects as well as the three-dimensional quality of the bronze
bodies, often concealed by the two-dimensional appearance of
photographic images. Carmelo Malacrino analyses these famous 5th
century BC masterpieces from two points of view: as ancient works
of art on the one hand, and considering their significance for
contemporary culture on the other. He retraces the story of the
Bronzes beginning with their discovery in August, 1972, exploring
the circumstances of their unearthing, the restoration they
underwent, the exhibitions in which they were shown, as well as the
impact they have had on the public, both nationally and
internationally. Equally relevant is the reinterpretation of these
two statues, beginning with their contextualisation in the sphere
of ancient Greek art, the related stylistic issues, and the
reflection upon the practices and the knowledge possessed by
Classical sculpture workshops. This volume will be a pleasant
surprise for those of you who love Classical sculpture, for
archaeology enthusiasts, and for all those who aren't satisfied
with a quick glance when it comes to admiring a work of art.
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Canova: In Four Tempos (Hardcover)
Prince, Domenico,Antonio,Pallavicino, Vittorio Sgarbi; Photographs by Luigi Spina
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R827
Discovery Miles 8 270
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Ships in 12 - 17 working days
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The full-size plaster models that represented the passage from a
preliminary designing phase to the production of the marble
sculpture were of great significance to Italian sculptor Antonio
Canova's creative process. As the subtitle emphasises, the temporal
dimension holds great importance in the neoclassic sculptor's
creative and productive phases: the plaster artefact posits a
before and an after. Before comes the preparatory study; after is
the finished work. Plaster stands in between, it is central. The
plaster forms are not the finished works, however they contain all
their power and potential. This volume explores this meaningful and
little-known phase in the creative process of Antonio Canova, along
with quality close-up photo sequences that expose the plaster
surfaces, bringing a greater focus and appreciation to the plaster
form.
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Hemba (Hardcover)
Luigi Spina, Contantine Petridis
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R1,660
R1,216
Discovery Miles 12 160
Save R444 (27%)
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Ships in 12 - 17 working days
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Expressing one of many Luba sub-styles, the tall, standing male
figures created by master carvers of the Hemba culture in
southeastern Congo since at least the mid-1800s arguably rank among
the noblest sculptural depictions of the human figure in
sub-Saharan Africa. With their serene gaze and meditative
expression, they exude a tranquility and dignity that befits these
idealised likenesses memorialising esteemed leaders of the past.
Infused with a life-force or vital energy, these spirit-invested
objects were able to communicate between the living and the dead.
Thanks to their inner power they had the capacity to impact the
material sphere by allowing the ancestors to positively influence
the well-being of their surviving relatives. In this publication,
through the perceptive lens of art photographer Luigi Spina, we
discover nine of the most accomplished Hemba creations whose
classical style has triggered comparisons with some kouroi
sculptures of ancient Greece. Spina's photographic interpretations
help us understand why these proportionally balanced and
symmetrically conceived ancestral figures have earned the
admiration of African art lovers around the world. These personal
readings of the beloved Hemba commemorative portraits also confirm
why these sensitive renderings of the human anatomy deserve
inclusion in the universal history of artistic creativity and a
place in Andre Malraux's 'Museum Without Walls'. Text in English
and French.
Antonio Canova (1757-1822), is considered the greatest Neoclassical
sculptor of the late 18th and early 19th centuries. This book, the
third in the series Canova: Four Tempos, features a collection of
sublime black and white photographs of Canova's plaster models
taken by photographer Luigi Spina. The full-size plaster models
that preceded the production of his marble sculptures played an
important part in Canova’s creative process. Included here are
his masterpieces The Three Graces and Sleeping Nymph, and the only
work Canova made for an overseas patron, George Washington depicted
as a Roman potentate. The text is by the well-known Italian art
historian Vittorio Sgarbi. Also available: Canova: Four Tempos,
Vol. 1, ISBN 9788874399215, and Canova: Four Tempos Vol. 2
9788874399598
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The Farnese Cup (Hardcover)
Valeria Sampaolo, Luigi Spina
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R1,060
R799
Discovery Miles 7 990
Save R261 (25%)
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Ships in 12 - 17 working days
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The Farnese Cup: the largest cameo hardstone cup to have survived
from the ancient world. A treasured piece that travelled over
centuries. A meticulously prepared publication illustrating the
Farnese Cup in varying perspectives. A tour de force of a carver's
skill and craftsmanship, the Farnese Cup is the largest cameo
hardstone cup to have survived from the ancient world. Thought to
be made in Hellenist Egypt sometime between 300 BC and 30 BC, the
Cup was not an archaeological find but rather a treasured piece
that travelled over centuries through many hands from Alexandria to
Rome to Constantinople and back to Rome before joining the Farnese
Collection now housed at the National Archeological Museum of
Naples. The Cup, carved out of sardonyx agate, remains the subject
of scholarly debate: what do the enigmatic figures in the inner
scene mean? And the terrifying face of the Gorgon on the outside?
Why was it made? And in what context? Whatever its inherent
meaning, the piece itself is commanding, requiring a close-up view
of each hand-carved detail, the balance and impact of the whole,
and the subtle variations in the material itself. This book
provides that close-up in a series of photographs and varying
perspectives that pull back from the delicate infinitesimal cut to
the magnificent, perfect whole. There is no better way - in fact no
possible way - for the general reader or connoisseur to fully
appreciate the Farnese Cup than through the pages of this
meticulously prepared publication.
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