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As a young English teacher keen to make a difference in the world,
Michelle Kuo took a job at a tough school in the Mississippi Delta,
sharing books and poetry with a young African-American teenager
named Patrick and his classmates. For the first time, these kids
began to engage with ideas and dreams beyond their small town, and
to gain an insight into themselves that they had never had before.
Two years later, Michelle left to go to law school; but Patrick
began to lose his way, ending up jailed for murder. And that's when
Michelle decided that her work was not done, and began to visit
Patrick once a week, and soon every day, to read with him again.
Reading with Patrick is an inspirational story of friendship, a
coming-of-age story for both a young teacher and a student, an
expansive, deeply resonant meditation on education, race and
justice, and a love letter to literature and its power to transcend
social barriers.
Paris Park Photographs features spectacular images from a dozen
public parks and gardens in and near France's capital city.
Exploring many of the same places that photographer Eugene Atget
(1857-1927) made famous a century ago, Michael Kolster references
the pleasures and pitfalls of wandering alone amongst trees and
plants and sculpture, unkempt and formally designed places,
tempered by the knowledge that the modern world with all its
congestion is only a few short steps away. These intimate yet
inherently expansive views of Paris's parks invite closer scrutiny
of the encounters awaiting us at the edges of the well-worn paths
defining our daily lives. Few people venture into the frame of
Kolster's photographs, but the promise of a renewed sense of hope
and community resides in the details of his visual encounters and
the moments of his heightened attention. Each picture speaks to us
as a moment in time, even as the sequence suggests a choreography
of place, one that can vary daily along with the changing moods and
light of each park. Paris Park Photographs is presented in a
bilingual English/French edition and concludes with an afterword by
Michelle Kuo. Of note is how the book's design is inspired by
Walker Evans's 1938 classic work, American Photographs, making
Kolster's book of immediate interest to photo and book collectors.
An updated and expanded edition of the acclaimed in-depth monograph
on one of the most influential artists of our time Conceived in
close collaboration with the artist, this updated survey tracks
Eliasson's artistic practice from the 1990s to the present day,
including recent exhibitions at Tate Modern, London (In real life,
2019) and the Beyeler Foundation, Basel (Life, 2021). Through
hundreds of illustrations bracketed by writings on and by Eliasson,
this book provides an unparalleled overview of his remarkably
accessible output, from such large-scale interactive experiences as
The weather project at Tate Modern, London (2003) to smaller, more
delicate works on paper or made of glass, and includes photography,
painting, and film.
This is a fully illustrated and user-friendly reference book that
tells where and when to find edible mushrooms - with delicious
recipes for each. With a dash of humor and a dollop of science,
Michael Kuo takes the mystery out of mushroom hunting and cooking.
Like his earlier and very popular book Morels, ""100 Edible
Mushrooms"" is written in the author's inimitable, engaging, and
appealingly humorous style, taking the reader on the hunt through
forest and kitchen in search of culinary delights and mycological
pleasures. Kuo describes in detail how to identify each species,
where and when to find them, and how to cook them in creative and
delicious recipes. The mushrooms presented in the book are the
most-often eaten varieties, including a description of the button
mushrooms found in the grocery store. All of the mushrooms have at
least one full-color illustration and some several more to aid in
identification and distinction of look-alike and nonedible species.
It is an indispensable book for mushroom hunters, cooks, and
naturalists.
How Silicon Valley, the dark net, and digital culture have affected
our relationship to knowledge, history, language, aesthetics,
reading, and truth. In October 2013, twenty-nine-year-old Ross
William Ulbricht was arrested at the Glen Park Public Branch
Library in San Francisco, accused of being the "Dread Pirate
Roberts" and mastermind of a dark net drug marketplace known as
Silk Road. Ulbricht was an ardent libertarian who believed Silk
Road-described by the New York Times as "the largest, most
sophisticated criminal enterprise the internet has ever seen"-was
battling the forces of big government. He was convicted two years
later of money laundering, computer hacking, and conspiracy to
traffic narcotics and sentenced to life in prison. Art historian
Pamela Lee reads this event as a fairy tale of disruption rather
than an isolated episode in the history of the dark net, Silicon
Valley, and the relationship between public libraries and digital
culture. Lee argues that the notion of "disruptive" technology in
contemporary culture has radically affected our relationship to
knowledge, history, language, aesthetics, reading, and truth.
Against the backdrop of her account of Ulbricht and his exploits,
Lee provides original readings of five women artists-Gretchen
Bender, Cecile B. Evans, Josephine Pryde, Carissa Rodriguez, and
Martine Syms-who weigh in, either explicitly or inadvertently, on
the nature of contemporary media and technology. Written as a work
of experimental art criticism, The Glen Park Library is both a
homage to the Bay Area and an excoriation of the ethos of Silicon
Valley. As with all fairy tales, the book's ultimate subjects are
much greater, however, and Lee casts a critical eye on collisions
between privacy and publicity, knowledge and information, and the
past and future that are enabled by the technocratic worldview.
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Jeff Koons - A Retrospective (Hardcover)
Scott Rothkopf; Contributions by Antonio Damasio, Jeffrey Deitch, Isabelle Graw, Achim Hochdoerfer, …
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R1,490
Discovery Miles 14 900
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Ships in 9 - 15 working days
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A fresh and engaging look at the controversial work of Jeff Koons,
with insightful analyses and illustrations of all of his iconic
pieces alongside preparatory works and historical photographs
Examining the breadth and depth of thirty-five years of work by
Jeff Koons (b. 1955), one of the most influential and controversial
artists of the 20th century, this highly anticipated volume
features all of his most famous pieces. In an engaging overview
essay, Scott Rothkopf carefully examines the evolution of Koons'
work and his development over the past thirty-five years, offering
a fresh scholarly perspective on the artist's multi-faceted career.
In addition, short essays by a wide range of interdisciplinary
contributors-from academics to novelists-probe provocative topics
such as celebrity and media, markets and money, and technology and
fabrication. Also included are preparatory sketches and plans for
sculptures and paintings as well as installation photographs that
shed light on Koons' artistic process and trace the development of
his work throughout his landmark career. Koons has risen to
international fame making art that reimagines and recontextualizes
images and objects from popular culture such as vacuum cleaners,
basketballs, and balloon animals. Created with painstaking
attention to detail by a team of fabricators, these objects raise
questions about taste and popular culture, and position Koons as
one of the most lauded and criticized artists working today.
Distributed for the Whitney Museum of American Art Exhibition
Schedule: Whitney Museum of American Art (06/27/14-10/19/14) Centre
Pompidou (11/26/14-04/27/15) Guggenheim Museum, Bilbao
(06/05/15-09/27/15)
From grassland fairy circles to alpine nano-shrooms, the Rocky
Mountain region invites mushroom hunters to range though a
mycological nirvana. Accessible and scientifically up-to-date, The
Essential Guide to Rocky Mountain Mushrooms by Habitat is the
definitive reference for uncovering post-rain rarities and kitchen
favorites alike. Dazzling full-color photos highlight the beauty of
hundreds of species. Easy-to-navigate entries offer essential
descriptions and tips for identifying mushrooms, including each
species' edibility, odor, taste, and rumored medicinal properties.
The authors organize the mushrooms according to habitat zone. This
ecology-centered approach places each species among surrounding
flora and fauna and provides a trove of fascinating insights on how
these charismatic fungi interact with the greater living world.
From grassland fairy circles to alpine nano-shrooms, the Rocky
Mountain region invites mushroom hunters to range though a
mycological nirvana. Accessible and scientifically up-to-date, The
Essential Guide to Rocky Mountain Mushrooms by Habitat is the
definitive reference for uncovering post-rain rarities and kitchen
favorites alike. Dazzling full-color photos highlight the beauty of
hundreds of species. Easy-to-navigate entries offer essential
descriptions and tips for identifying mushrooms, including each
species' edibility, odor, taste, and rumored medicinal properties.
The authors organize the mushrooms according to habitat zone. This
ecology-centered approach places each species among surrounding
flora and fauna and provides a trove of fascinating insights on how
these charismatic fungi interact with the greater living world.
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