Click for Breakfast at Sotheby's!!
Hook offers up a dishy lexicon of art-world topics and terminology in
this loosely structured dictionary. As painting specialist for Sotheby's
auction house and a popular appraiser on Antiques Roadshow, Hook is
fascinated by the relationship between art and money, and by the ways in
which an artwork obtains its market value. Relying on 35 years of
experience and anecdote, Hook divides his guide into sections that cover
artists' backstories, artists' subjects, visual impact, provenance, and
market variance. Each section contains a unique alphabet of pithy,
bite-size essays, which lay bare outrageous episodes of art history and
oddities of audience taste. Football, for example, charts auction sales
against ballplayer salaries over time. Interiors reveals that Bonnard's
bathrooms and Matisse's hotels are in demand, while no one wants
paintings of churches. War (191418) cheerfully lists artists whose work
would have fetched better prices if only they had perished earlier. With
its tone of art-history-textbook-meets-tabloid, Hook's witty primer
provides a truthful yet humorous crash course, an insider's take that is
more gentle ribbing than art-world expos. (Booklist)
Arts!
A selection of our new and noteworthy materials on the Performing Arts as well as other Fine Arts
Wednesday, September 24, 2014
Monday, September 15, 2014
The 21st-Century Art Book
Click for : The Twenty First Century Art Book !!
The 21st‐Century Art Book" is an A‐to‐Z guide of contemporary artists featuring established art‐world figures - Maurizio Cattelan, Cindy Sherman, Jeff Wall - alongside rising stars of the next generations. Global in scope, the book features work from 50 countries across a variety of mediums, from painting, drawing, and sculpture to digital art, video installation, and performance.
Each of the 280 artists included has a dedicated page pairing a significant artwork from his or her oeuvre with lively and informative text. An international directory of major art events along with a helpful glossary round out the package, making this both a must‐have resource and a beautifully illustrated celebration of contemporary art.
The 21st‐Century Art Book" is an A‐to‐Z guide of contemporary artists featuring established art‐world figures - Maurizio Cattelan, Cindy Sherman, Jeff Wall - alongside rising stars of the next generations. Global in scope, the book features work from 50 countries across a variety of mediums, from painting, drawing, and sculpture to digital art, video installation, and performance.
Each of the 280 artists included has a dedicated page pairing a significant artwork from his or her oeuvre with lively and informative text. An international directory of major art events along with a helpful glossary round out the package, making this both a must‐have resource and a beautifully illustrated celebration of contemporary art.
Wednesday, September 10, 2014
Rendez-Vous with Art
Click for Rendez-vous With Art!!
The premise two art experts look at some of the world's most magnificent works in tandem is a good one, offering readers guided tours of the Louvre, the Prado, the Palazzo Pitti, and other prestigious institutions. The experts in question, Philippe de Montebello, who spent 31 years as director of the Metropolitan Museum of Art, and Martin Gayford (Man With a Blue Scarf: On Sitting for a Portrait by Lucian Freud), a highly regarded British art critic, certainly fit the bill. The book adds an ingenious twist to the classic approach to art criticism, which is, for the most part, effective. Montebello and Gayford offer depth and context to key works by Bosch, Goya, Vermeer, followed by erudite discussions. The authors' admissions that they didn't appreciate certain styles or eras at first; explanations regarding the effects of a museum's physical layout on a visitor's experience and interpretation, and the declaration that we're now spending more time looking at photos and reproductions of artworks than the real thing are sure to provoke a response. Assuming readers can get past the authors' egos (which loom large) and their penchant for peppering their text with purple prose, there are considerable insights into the featured art. Publishers Weekly
The premise two art experts look at some of the world's most magnificent works in tandem is a good one, offering readers guided tours of the Louvre, the Prado, the Palazzo Pitti, and other prestigious institutions. The experts in question, Philippe de Montebello, who spent 31 years as director of the Metropolitan Museum of Art, and Martin Gayford (Man With a Blue Scarf: On Sitting for a Portrait by Lucian Freud), a highly regarded British art critic, certainly fit the bill. The book adds an ingenious twist to the classic approach to art criticism, which is, for the most part, effective. Montebello and Gayford offer depth and context to key works by Bosch, Goya, Vermeer, followed by erudite discussions. The authors' admissions that they didn't appreciate certain styles or eras at first; explanations regarding the effects of a museum's physical layout on a visitor's experience and interpretation, and the declaration that we're now spending more time looking at photos and reproductions of artworks than the real thing are sure to provoke a response. Assuming readers can get past the authors' egos (which loom large) and their penchant for peppering their text with purple prose, there are considerable insights into the featured art. Publishers Weekly
Tuesday, September 9, 2014
Secrets of Backyard Bird Photography
Click for Secrets of Backyard Bird Photography !
Photographing birds in your backyard is a convenient, rewarding, and addictive adventure. "Secrets of Backyard Bird Photography" is a guide to that pursuit. In this book, author and wildlife photographer J. Chris Hansen teaches techniques for creating professional-quality images of the subjects right in your yard. This book covers all aspects of backyard bird photography, including the best camera equipment to use and the basics of attracting birds using bird feeders, perches, backgrounds, and photo blinds. You'll learn about the common camera settings and composition styles used to create outstanding backyard bird images. This book also offers ideas and examples of ways to exhibit your photography, including step-by-step instructions for a variety of fun, easy projects for the do-it-yourselfer. "Secrets of Backyard Bird Photography" contains a collection of beautiful, detailed images that illustrate the important aspects of creating stunning photographs of the birds right in your backyard.
Photographing birds in your backyard is a convenient, rewarding, and addictive adventure. "Secrets of Backyard Bird Photography" is a guide to that pursuit. In this book, author and wildlife photographer J. Chris Hansen teaches techniques for creating professional-quality images of the subjects right in your yard. This book covers all aspects of backyard bird photography, including the best camera equipment to use and the basics of attracting birds using bird feeders, perches, backgrounds, and photo blinds. You'll learn about the common camera settings and composition styles used to create outstanding backyard bird images. This book also offers ideas and examples of ways to exhibit your photography, including step-by-step instructions for a variety of fun, easy projects for the do-it-yourselfer. "Secrets of Backyard Bird Photography" contains a collection of beautiful, detailed images that illustrate the important aspects of creating stunning photographs of the birds right in your backyard.
Monday, August 25, 2014
Testament
Click for Testament.
Chris Hondros (March 14, 1970--April 20, 2011) was an American Pulitzer Prize-nominated photojournalist. Born in New York City to Greek and German immigrants, both survivors of World War II, he moved to Fayetteville, North Carolina, as a child. After studying English literature at North Carolina State University and receiving a master's degree from Ohio University's School of Visual Communication, Hondros returned to New York to concentrate on international reporting.
Hondros covered most of the world's major conflicts and disasters since the late 1990s, including work in Kosovo, Afghanistan, the West Bank, Iraq, Liberia, Egypt, and Libya. Hondros was also a frequent lecturer and published essayist on issues of war, and he regularly wrote for the "Virginia Quarterly Review," "Editor & Publisher," the Digital Journalist, and other news publications.
Hondros, a staff photographer for Getty Images since 2000, was a two-time finalist for the Pulitzer Prize in breaking news photography: in 2004, for his work in Liberia, and posthumously in 2012, for his coverage of the Arab Spring. During his career, he received dozens of awards, among them honors from World Press Photo, the Pictures of the Year International competition, Visa pour l'Image, and the Overseas Press Club, including the John Faber Award for his work in Liberia and the Robert Capa Gold Medal, war photography's highest honor, for his work covering the conflict in Iraq.
Chris Hondros (March 14, 1970--April 20, 2011) was an American Pulitzer Prize-nominated photojournalist. Born in New York City to Greek and German immigrants, both survivors of World War II, he moved to Fayetteville, North Carolina, as a child. After studying English literature at North Carolina State University and receiving a master's degree from Ohio University's School of Visual Communication, Hondros returned to New York to concentrate on international reporting.
Hondros covered most of the world's major conflicts and disasters since the late 1990s, including work in Kosovo, Afghanistan, the West Bank, Iraq, Liberia, Egypt, and Libya. Hondros was also a frequent lecturer and published essayist on issues of war, and he regularly wrote for the "Virginia Quarterly Review," "Editor & Publisher," the Digital Journalist, and other news publications.
Hondros, a staff photographer for Getty Images since 2000, was a two-time finalist for the Pulitzer Prize in breaking news photography: in 2004, for his work in Liberia, and posthumously in 2012, for his coverage of the Arab Spring. During his career, he received dozens of awards, among them honors from World Press Photo, the Pictures of the Year International competition, Visa pour l'Image, and the Overseas Press Club, including the John Faber Award for his work in Liberia and the Robert Capa Gold Medal, war photography's highest honor, for his work covering the conflict in Iraq.
Thursday, August 21, 2014
Eye to Eye: Photographs by Vivian Maier
Click for Eye to Eye : Photographs by Vivian Maier!!
The exceptional story of masterful nanny street photographer Vivian Maier (19262009) continues to unfold, entrancing viewers and readers everywhere. The documentary film Finding Vivian Maier (2014) provides a wider lens on her life, and now the superbly gifted writing and photo restoration duo, Richard Cahan and Michael Williams, bring out their second Maier book, following the revelatory Vivian Maier: Out of the Shadows (2012). Here they publish for the first time 100 pristine and electrifying portraits of strangers the rapturously observant Maier encountered by chance and swiftly connected with eye-to-eye. Attaining particular rapport with the young and the old, Maier elicited smiles and scowls as she courageously roamed, cameras around her neck, streets and byways in New York City, Chicago, Florida, the French countryside, Malaysia, Thailand, and Yemen. Cahan and Williams suggest that Maier's work as a domestic enhanced her ability to astutely, intimately, and forthrightly scrutinize people and their worlds. The longer you gaze at these sumptuously printed black-and-white photographs, taken from 1949 into the 1970s, the more you realize how brilliantly and vibrantly composed they are and how captivated resolute and relentless Maier was by the power of faces and by people's profound relationships with their surroundings. Maier's portraits, radiant flashes of mutual recognition, are breathtaking works of art.(Reprinted with permission of Booklist, copyright 2014, American Library Association.)
The exceptional story of masterful nanny street photographer Vivian Maier (19262009) continues to unfold, entrancing viewers and readers everywhere. The documentary film Finding Vivian Maier (2014) provides a wider lens on her life, and now the superbly gifted writing and photo restoration duo, Richard Cahan and Michael Williams, bring out their second Maier book, following the revelatory Vivian Maier: Out of the Shadows (2012). Here they publish for the first time 100 pristine and electrifying portraits of strangers the rapturously observant Maier encountered by chance and swiftly connected with eye-to-eye. Attaining particular rapport with the young and the old, Maier elicited smiles and scowls as she courageously roamed, cameras around her neck, streets and byways in New York City, Chicago, Florida, the French countryside, Malaysia, Thailand, and Yemen. Cahan and Williams suggest that Maier's work as a domestic enhanced her ability to astutely, intimately, and forthrightly scrutinize people and their worlds. The longer you gaze at these sumptuously printed black-and-white photographs, taken from 1949 into the 1970s, the more you realize how brilliantly and vibrantly composed they are and how captivated resolute and relentless Maier was by the power of faces and by people's profound relationships with their surroundings. Maier's portraits, radiant flashes of mutual recognition, are breathtaking works of art.(Reprinted with permission of Booklist, copyright 2014, American Library Association.)
Thursday, August 14, 2014
Superlight: Rethinking How Our Homes Impact the Earth
Click for Superlight: Rethinking How Our Homes Impact the Earth
One of the most influential design philosophies of the past 25 years has been Glenn Murcutts dictum that buildings should touch the earth lightly. Today, climate change, new materials, and restricted land use have given fresh impetus to finding lightweight solutions for our dwellings. The 40 houses gathered here by Phyllis Richardson - author of the highly successful XS series and Nano House - show us that buildings can weigh less and have minimal impact on their environments, and that this lightness - visual, material, ecological - can create beautiful, ethereal homes that offer new, natural modes of habitation and greater communion with our surroundings.
One of the most influential design philosophies of the past 25 years has been Glenn Murcutts dictum that buildings should touch the earth lightly. Today, climate change, new materials, and restricted land use have given fresh impetus to finding lightweight solutions for our dwellings. The 40 houses gathered here by Phyllis Richardson - author of the highly successful XS series and Nano House - show us that buildings can weigh less and have minimal impact on their environments, and that this lightness - visual, material, ecological - can create beautiful, ethereal homes that offer new, natural modes of habitation and greater communion with our surroundings.
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