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John Ruskin assembled 1470 diverse works of art for use in the
Drawing School he founded at Oxford in 1871. They included drawings
by himself and other artists, prints and photographs. This book
focuses on highlights of works produced by Ruskin himself. Drawings
by John Ruskin are uniquely interesting. Unlike those of a
professional artist they were not made in preparation for finished
paintings or as works in their own right. Every one - and they
number several thousand, depending on what can be considered a
separate drawing - is a record of something seen, initially as a
memorandum of that observation but with the potential to illustrate
his writings or for educational purposes, notably to form part of
the teaching collection of the Drawing School he established after
election as Slade Professor of Fine Art at Oxford University. In
addition, because of the range of interests of arguably the only
true polymath of his time, every drawing touches on some
interesting aspect of art and architecture, landscape and travel,
botany and natural history, often connected with his writings and
lectures. Ruskin's life is one of the best documented of any in the
19th century, through letters, diaries and the many
autobiographical revelations in his published writings: this allows
the opportunity to give almost any drawing a level of context
impossible for any other artist. When there is so much background
information, a single drawing reveals much about its creator, and
becomes a window into the great sprawling edifice of his life and
work.
A full-size facsimile of John Ruskin’s as yet unpublished book of
pressed plants with notes, collected and compiled by Ruskin during
1844 from the mountains and forests around Chamonix, France. This
rare example of a herbier to be reproduced and published is
accompanied with a second volume of notes and commentary. Here,
Ruskin’s full, scientific explanations are fully commented on in
the light of modern botanical knowledge. Professors David Ingram
and Stephen Wildman provide an introduction, illuminating essays
and detailed notes and commentary on Ruskin’s herbier.
Between the late 1970s and the early 1990s the U.S. television
industry transformed from a heavily regulated business to a highly
competitive one, with new networks, technologies, and markets.
Video Economics addresses the major issues affecting competitive
advantage in the industry, including sequential program release
strategies known as windowing, competition among program producers,
the economics of networking, cable television, scheduling
strategies, and high definition television (HDTV). The authors
present the economic tools required to analyze the industry as they
take up each new topic. This book will be of particular interest to
students of the mass media, communication policy officials,
communication lawyers and consultants, and media and advertising
executives.
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