Catalog Search Results
Author
Publication Date
2014.
Description
"The vibrant art scene in Iran today is a product of the country's tumultuous modern history. Contemporary Iranian art offers a comprehensive analysis of the art and visual culture of Iran since the 1979 revolution and the constellation of social, political, religious and cultural tensions that gave rise to it."
"The art world has recently witnessed a surge of interest in contemporary Iranian art, but what is the background to Iran's vibrant art...
Author
Publication Date
c2011
Physical Desc
xv, 110 p. : ill. (some col.)
Description
In Working South, renowned watercolorist Mary Whyte captures in exquisite detail the essence of vanishing blue-collar professions from across ten states in the American South with sensitivity and reverence for her subjects. From the textile mill worker and tobacco farmer to the sponge diver and elevator operator, Whyte has sought out some of the last remnants of rural and industrial workforces declining or altogether lost through changes in our economy,...
Publication Date
[2015]
Physical Desc
1 online resource (293 pages) : illustrations.
Description
The essays collected here evaluate the broad range of contexts in which Spaniards were present in early modern Italy. They consider diplomacy, sanctity, art, politics and even popular verse. Each essay excavates how Italians who came into contact with the Spanish crown's power perceived and interacted with the wider range of identities brought amongst them by its servants and subjects. Together they demonstrate what influenced and what determined...
Author
Description
"This highly original book asks new questions about paintings and prints associated with the British West Indies between 1700 and 1840, when the trade in sugar and slaves was most active and profitable. In a wide-ranging study of scientific illustrations, scenes of daily life, caricatures, and landscape imagery, Kay Dian Kriz analyzes the visual culture of refinement that accompanied the brutal process by which African slaves transformed 'rude' sugar...
Author
Publication Date
2006
Physical Desc
xi, 171 p.
Description
"Donald Preziosi's latest collection of essays, In the Aftermath of Art, explores multiple perspectives on the enduring foundational dilemmas of art history, art criticism, and museology. By juxtaposing issues and problems originally addressed sequentially, the collection aims to open up multiple interpretative possibilities by bringing to the surface hidden resonances in the implications of each text. It presents a model of reading, re-reading and...
Author
Publication Date
2005
Physical Desc
xii, 280 p. : ill. (some col.).
Description
Revealing Art is a stimulating and lucid book about why art is important and the role of the imagination in art, illustrated with colour and black-and-white plates of examples from Michaelangelo to Matisse and from Poussin to Pollock.
Author
Series
Publication Date
2005
Description
In this bracing engagement with the many versions of art history, James Elkins argues that the story of modernism and postmodernism is almost always told in terms of four narratives. Works of art are either seen as modern or postmodern, or praised for their technical skill or because of the politics they appear to embody. These are master narratives of contemporary criticism, and each leads to a different understanding of what art is and does. Both...
Publication Date
2004
Physical Desc
xviii, 241 p. : ill.
Description
The authenticity of visual art has always commanded the attention of experts, dealers, collectors, and the art-minded public. Is it "real" or "original" is a way of asking what am I buying? What do I own? What am I looking at? And today more sophisticated questions are being asked: How is authenticity determined and what weight does this determination have in court? This book of essays proposes to answer those questions. Three lines of inquiry are...
Author
Publication Date
c2011
Physical Desc
184 p. : ill. (chiefly col.)
Description
Images of the Tropics critically examines Dutch colonial culture in the Netherlands Indies through the prism of landscape art. Susie Protschky contends that visual representations of nature and landscape were core elements of how Europeans understood the tropics, justified their territorial claims in the region, and understood their place both in imperial Europe and in colonized Asia during the nineteenth and early twentieth centuries. Her book thus...
Author
Description
South Africa is recognized as a site of both political turmoil and natural beauty, and yet little work has been done in connecting these defining national characteristics. Washed with Sun achieves this conjunction in its multidisciplinary study of South Africa as a space at once natural and constructed. Weaving together practical, aesthetic, and ideological analyses, Jeremy Foster examines the role of landscape in forming the cultural iconographies...
Author
Publication Date
2012
Physical Desc
x, 316 p. : ill., port.
Description
Mages of Manhood asks the question: How have gay/queer men in Southeast Asia used images of paradise to construct homes for themselves and for the different ideas of manhood they represent? The book examines how three gay men in Bali, Bangkok, and Singapore have deployed different ideas of "paradise" over the past century to create a sense of refuge and to dissent from typical notions of manhood and masculinity. For the disciplines of queer studies,...
Author
Description
Since its publication fifty years ago, this work has established itself as a classic. It casts the visual process in psychological terms and describes the creative way one's eye organizes visual material according to specific psychological premises. In 1974 this book was revised and expanded, and since then it has continued to burnish Rudolf Arnheim's reputation as a groundbreaking theoretician in the fields of art and psychology.--From publisher...
Author
Series
Publication Date
c2008
Physical Desc
383 p. : ill.
Description
Using Gilles Deleuze and Félix Guattari?s concept of the rhizome, Neil Campbell shows how the West (or west-ness) continually breaks away from a mainstream notion of American?rootedness? and renews and transforms itself in various cultural forms. A region long traversed by various transient peoples (from tribes and conquerors to immigrants, traders, and trappers), the West reflects a mythic quest for settlement, permanence, and synthesis?even notions...
Author
Publication Date
2014.
Physical Desc
1 online resource (328 pages) : illustrations
Description
"Although many of the iconographic traditions in Byzantine art formed in the early centuries of Christianity, they were not petrified within a time warp. Subtle changes and refinements in Byzantine theology did find reflection in changes to the iconographic and stylistic conventions of Byzantine art. This is a brilliant and innovative book in which Dr Anita Strezova argues that a religious movement called Hesychasm, especially as espoused by the great...
Author
Publication Date
2014.
Physical Desc
1 online resource (247 pages) : illustrations (some color)
Description
The mighty Hoover Dam, starting as a dream of land developers and farmers, became the most ambitious civil engineering project of the Great Depression. This landmark in the middle of the Mojave Desert, holding back the largest man-made lake in America, also became, like Mount Rushmore or the Empire State Building, a visual and cultural icon. The power and meanings of this icon came not through a single image but via myriad visual representations,...
Author
Series
Toronto Iberic volume 19
Publication Date
2016.
Physical Desc
1 online resource (277 pages) : illustrations (some color), photographs.
Description
In Ghostly Landscapes, Patricia M Keller analyses the aesthetics of haunting and the relationship between ideology and image production by revisiting twentieth-century Spanish history through the camera's lens. Through its vision she demonstrates how the traumatic losses of the Spanish Civil War and their systematic denial and burial during the fascist dictatorship have constituted fertile territory for the expressions of loss, uncanny return, and...
Author
Series
Cultures beliefs and traditions volume 22
Publication Date
2004
Physical Desc
xxxii, 527 p. : ill. (some col.).
Description
In the fourth century the idea arose that the Cross on which Christ was crucified had been found by Helena, mother of Emperor Constantine. Thus began a legend that would grow and flourish throughout the Middle Ages and cause the diffusion of countless splinters of holy wood. And where there is wood, there was once a tree. Could it be that the Cross was made from that most noble species, the Tree of Life? So, gathering characters along the way, the...
Author
Publication Date
2015.
Physical Desc
1 online resource (273 pages) : illustrations
Description
In what ways do the artistic avant-garde's representations of the human body reflect the catastrophe of World War I? The European modernists were inspired by developments in the nineteenth-century, yielding new forms of knowledge about the nature of reality and repositioning the human body as the new 'object' of knowledge. New 'visions' of the human subject were created within this transformation. However, modernity's reactionary political climate...






