Human figures depicted in the arts Books
Brill Beyond the Yellow Badge (paperback): Anti-Judaism and Antisemitism in Medieval and Early Modern Visual Culture
Book SynopsisIn thirteen essays by leading art historians, and a critical introduction by the editor, Beyond the Yellow Badge seeks to reframe the relationship between European visual culture and the changing aspect of the Christian majority’s negative conceptions of Jews and Judaism during the Middle Ages and early modern periods. By situating their subjects within a broad continuum of historical and critical issues, the authors inquire into such questions as the shifting politics of toleration and intoleration; the role played by anti-Judaic legends in the formation of Christian cults; the role of positive evaluations of Hebrew, Jewish learning and Christian hopes for Jewish conversion; and the transformation of religious anti-Judaism into its modern racial and nationalistic counterparts. The book will be of special interest to art historians, cultural historians, students of Christian theology and Jewish history, and to educated general readers.Table of ContentsCONTENTS Introduction PART I: STAGES OF CONVERSION Chapter One ‘Fair and Friendly, Sweet and Beautiful’: Hopes for Jewish Conversion in Synagoga’s Song of Songs Imagery Elizabeth Monroe Chapter Two Disputation in Stone: Jews Imagined on the Saint Stephen Portal of Paris Cathedral Kara Ann Morrow Chapter Three Taking Little Jesus to School in Two Thirteenth-Century Latin Psalters from South Germany Eva Frojmovic Chapter Four The Performative Terms of Jewish Iconoclasm and Conversion in Two Saint Nicholas Windows at Chartres Cathedral Anne F. Harris PART II: THE IMAGE OF THE JEW AND ITS PUBLIC Chapter Five The Passion, the Jews, and the Crisis of the Individual on the Naumburg West Choir Screen Jacqueline E. Jung37:23 PM Chapter Six Idealization and Subjection at the South Façade of Strasbourg Cathedral Nina Rowe Chapter Seven The Jews, Leviticus, and the Unclean in Medieval English Bestiaries Debra Higgs Strickland Chapter Eight Constructing the Inimical Jew in the Cantigas de Santa Maria: Theophilus’s Magician in Text and Image Pamela A. Patton Chapter Nine Images of ‘Jud Süss’ Oppenheimer, an Early Modern Jew Vivian B. Mann PART III: “THE HEBREW TRUTH” Chapter Ten Old Testament Heroes in Venetian High Renaissance Art Paul D. Kaplan Chapter Eleven Cleansing the Temple: The Munich Gruftkirche as Converted Synagogue Mitchell B. Merback Chapter Twelve New Attitudes towards the Jews in the Era of Reformation and Counter-Reformation: The Patronage of Bishop Echter von Mespelbrunn Annette Weber Chapter Thirteen Between Calvinists and Jews: Hebrew Script in Rembrandt’s Art Shalom Sabar
£67.20
Brill De la figuration humaine au portrait dans l’art islamique
Book SynopsisCe livre présente une étude historique et culturel sur l'art figuration humaine et le portrait dans un contexte islamique médiéval basé sur des sources littéraires et iconographiques. Avec: Sheila Blair; Éloïse Brac de la Perrière; Oleg Grabar; Kata Keresztely; Mika Natif; Yves Porter; Houari Touati This book presents an art historical and cultural study of human figuration and portraiture in a medieval islamic context, based on literary and iconographic sources. With contributions by: Sheila Blair; Éloïse Brac de la Perrière; Oleg Grabar; Kata Keresztely; Mika Natif; Yves Porter; Houari TouatiTrade Review"L’ouvrage apportera indéniablement au chercheur un nouvel éclairage des questions traitées et permettra de repenser divers aspects du statut et de l’histoire de la figuration humaine dans l’art islamique. Grâce au cahier iconographique, le lecteur peut suivre l’argumentation, voire vérifier certaines indications au fil de la lecture. S’il faut signaler un défaut à cet ouvrage, c’est sa relative concision. Si elle paraît constituer une garantie de la qualité des contributions sélectionnées, celles-ci ouvrent de nombreuses perspectives et soulèvent de nouvellesquestions que le lecteur curieux souhaiterait voir poursuivies au-delà de l’abondante bibliographie proposée en fin de volume". Katia Zakharia in arabica 63 (2016) 377-418. "En s’attachant à expliquer les conditions du développement et de la légitimation de l’image figurée et d’une certaine iconophilie dans la culture islamique, l’ouvrage apporte de nouveaux éléments de réflexion sur la conception de l’art islamique". Sandra Aube in Bulletin critique des annales islamologiques, 2015, 30, pp.46-48. "...the contributions made by the essays collected in this volume are numerous and manifold. They draw attention to a number of little known or unknown textual sources. They put forward a variety of opinions and attitudes regarding the image. They offer alternate perspectives and in-depth reflections on the issue of portraiture, notably highlighting the highly symbolic and essentialist character of paintings." Nourrane Ben Azzouna, University of Strasbourg.Table of ContentsIntroduction, Houari Touati Le régime des images figuratives dans la culture islamique medieval, Houari Touati Une brève histoire des portraits d’auteurs dans les manuscrits islamiques, Sheila S. Blair Réflexions préliminaires sur les portraits d’auteurs dans l’art islamique : Le cas de Moïse dans le Jāmi‘ al-Tawārīkh de Rashīd al-Dīn, Mika Natif Histoire des portraits du prophète Muḥammad, Oleg Grabar et Mika Natif Le portrait dans l’Orient musulman pré-moderne : une décantation du modèle en son essence, Yves Porter (en collaboration avec Richard Castinel) Les représentations humaines dans la peinture arabe medieval. L’exemple du Ḥarīrī-Schefer, Kata Keresztely Des idées aux images : les personnages indiens dans la miniature islamique, Éloïse Brac de la Perrière Illustrations Les auteurs Cahier iconographique
£126.40
Brill Cellini's Perseus and Medusa and the Loggia dei Lanzi: Configurations of the Body of State
Book SynopsisBenvenuto Cellini’s Perseus and Medusa, one of Renaissance Italy’s most complex sculptures, is the subject of this study, which proposes that the statue’s androgynous appearance is paradoxical. Symbolizing the male ruler overcoming a female adversary, the Perseus legitimizes patriarchal power; but the physical similarity between Cellini’s characters suggests the hero rose through female agency. Dr. Corretti argues that although not a surrogate for powerful Medici women, Cellini’s Medusa may have reminded viewers that Cosimo I de’ Medici’s power stemmed in part from maternal influence. Drawing upon a vast body of art and literature, Dr. Corretti concludes that Cellini and his contemporaries knew the Gorgon as a version of the Earth Mother, whose image is found in art for Medici women.Table of ContentsContents Prologue vii List of Figures xvi xviii 1 The Story of Perseus and Medusa, an Interpretation of Its Meaning, and the Topos of Decapitation 1 2 Cellini’s Perseus and Medusa : The Paradigm of Control 17 3 Renaissance Political Theory and Paradoxes of Power 57 4 The Goddess as Other and Same 92 5 The Sexual Symbolism of the Perseus and Medusa 104 6 The Public Face of Justice 109 7 Classical and Grotesque Polities 127 8 Eleonora di Toledo and the Image of the Mother Goddess 137 Conclusion 154 Bibliography 157 Index 173
£120.80
Brill Venus as Muse: From Lucretius to Michel Serres
Book SynopsisThis volume deals with the enduring presence of one of Western culture's most fascinating and influential figures in ancient, modern, and postmodern art and literature: Venus/Aphrodite, the goddess of love, beauty, and sexuality. The collection, which is the first of its kind, seeks to explore Venus's significance as a figure of beauty and creativity across cultures and disciplines, engaging a range of media, theoretical approaches, and cultural perspectives. Thirteen international scholars—including Elisabeth Bronfen, Tom Conley, Laurence Rickels, and Barbara Vinken—illuminate Venus's lasting value as a multifaceted figure of the creative in Western culture, from Lucretius to Michel Serres.Trade Review“The strength of the collection is its emphasis on historical continuity: Western culture, it seems, frequently drawing on Oriental models, has always had need of a love goddess. She has just taken different forms as social contexts have evolved down the last two millennia.” - Julian Preece, Swansea University, in: Modern Language Review 111.2 (2016), pp. 534-535Table of ContentsContents Introduction GÜNTER BLAMBERGER Venus as Muse. A Contradictory Thought-Image? 9 SEBASTIAN GOTH Venus Anadyomene. The Birth of Art 15 ELIZABETH ASMIS Venus and the Passion for Renewal in Lucretius’s On the Nature of Things 41 Visual & Performing Arts JENNIFER SHAW The Figure of Venus. Rhetoric of the Ideal from Cabanel to Claude Cahun 57 JEANETTE KOHL Intra-Venus 73 Literature SEBASTIAN GOTH Venus as Muse. Toward a Poetics of Lust 121 RUDOLF DRUX “The Most Blessed Goddess” Venus as the ‘Ally’ of the Poet (in) Heinrich Heine 149 TOM CONLEY Venus Backwards. From Rimbaud to Ronsard 163 BARBARA VINKEN Nana: Venus a rebours. Paris of the Second Empire as the Return of Rome and Babylon 173 HANJO BERRESSEM The Transit of Venus 199 Film, Media, Theory LAURENCE RICKELS Venus Barbata 221 ELISABETH BRONFEN Cleopatra’s Venus 235 COLIN GARDNER Samuel Beckett’s ‘Peephole’ Venus. Re-Sexualization, The Oral Mother, and the Masochist Contract in Eh Joe, Ghost Trio, and …but the clouds… 251 PATRICIA MACCORMACK Venusian Ecosophy 265 Contributors 281
£79.20
Brill Exploring the Black Venus Figure in Aesthetic Practices
Book SynopsisExploring the Black Venus Figure in Aesthetic Practices critically examines a longstanding colonial fascination with the black female body as an object of sexual desire, envy, and anxiety. Since the 2002 repatriation of the remains of Sara Baartman to post-apartheid South Africa, the interest in the figure of Black Venus has skyrocketed, making her a key symbol for the restoration of the racialized female body in feminist, anti-racist and postcolonial terms. Edited by Jorunn Gjerden, Kari Jegerstedt, and Željka Švrljuga, this volume considers Black Venus as a product of art established and potentially refigured through aesthetic practices, following her travels through different periods, geographies and art forms from Baudelaire to Kara Walker, and from the Caribbean to Scandinavia. Contributors: Kjersti Aarstein, Carmen Birkle, Jorunn Svensen Gjerden, Kari Jegerstedt, Ulla Angkjær Jørgensen, Ljubica Matek, Margery Vibe Skagen, Camilla Erichsen Skalle, Željka Švrljuga.
£104.00
Brill Exploring the Black Venus Figure in Aesthetic Practices
Book SynopsisExploring the Black Venus Figure in Aesthetic Practices critically examines a longstanding colonial fascination with the black female body as an object of sexual desire, envy, and anxiety. Since the 2002 repatriation of the remains of Sara Baartman to post-apartheid South Africa, the interest in the figure of Black Venus has skyrocketed, making her a key symbol for the restoration of the racialized female body in feminist, anti-racist and postcolonial terms. Edited by Jorunn Gjerden, Kari Jegerstedt, and Željka Švrljuga, this volume considers Black Venus as a product of art established and potentially refigured through aesthetic practices, following her travels through different periods, geographies and art forms from Baudelaire to Kara Walker, and from the Caribbean to Scandinavia. Contributors: Kjersti Aarstein, Carmen Birkle, Jorunn Svensen Gjerden, Kari Jegerstedt, Ulla Angkjær Jørgensen, Ljubica Matek, Margery Vibe Skagen, Camilla Erichsen Skalle, Željka Švrljuga.
£47.20
£16.54
Independently Published As If In A Dream
£12.39
Amazon Digital Services LLC - Kdp Citazioni Classiche
£11.23
Independently Published Found Visions
£999.99
Amazon Digital Services LLC - Kdp Coffee Corners Around the Globe
£14.11
Amazon Digital Services LLC - Kdp As Bestas
£18.71
Amazon Digital Services LLC - Kdp Pose Volume 3
£34.19
Lovink Coloring Girls Dream
£11.19
Trolley Books Reflex Contemporary Japanese SelfPortraiture
Book SynopsisIn this title 40 young artists realise the manifestations of modern Japan through their own unique brand of self-portraiture. These artists have provided the concerns of young Japan and illustrated the pressures of society.
£25.46
Manchester University Press Killing Men & Dying Women: Imagining Difference
Book SynopsisWhat did it mean for painter Lee Krasner to be an artist and a woman if, in the culture of 1950s New York, to be an artist was to be Jackson Pollock and to be a woman was to be Marilyn Monroe? With this question, Griselda Pollock begins a transdisciplinary journey across the gendered aesthetics and the politics of difference in New York abstract, gestural painting. Revisiting recent exhibitions of Abstract Expressionism that either marginalised the artist-women in the movement or focused solely on the excluded women, as well as exhibitions of women in abstraction, Pollock reveals how theories of embodiment, the gesture, hysteria and subjectivity can deepen our understanding of this moment in the history of painting co-created by women and men. Providing close readings of key paintings by Lee Krasner and re-thinking her own historic examination of images of Jackson Pollock and Helen Frankenthaler at work, Pollock builds a cultural bridge between the New York artist-women and their other, Marilyn Monroe, a creative actor whose physically anguished but sexually appropriated star body is presented as pathos formula of life energy.Monroe emerges as a haunting presence within this moment of New York modernism, eroding the policed boundaries between high and popular culture and explaining what we gain by re-thinking art with the richness of feminist thought.Trade Review‘With theoretic acuity, Griselda Pollock revisits New York Abstract Expressionism to propose a feminist reading of the Jewish-American artist Lee Krasner that is as astonishing as it is compelling. Seeking to discover inscriptions of feminine sexual difference, these psychoanalytically inspired essays revolve around a conceptual triangulation, in which Krasner’s position as a painter-woman in abstract art is conceived as a third position, interrogating and reworking two competing components of her creative energy – with Jackson Pollock as an iconisation of her identity as an artist and Marilyn Monroe as an iconisation of her identity as a woman. The triptych that emerges is utterly riveting.’ Elisabeth Bronfen, Professor of English and American Studies, University of Zurich‘Killing Men & Dying Women represents an exciting new development for Griselda Pollock’s work. She deconstructs the misogyny of 1950s America as well as an art establishment that critically ignored and institutionally marginalised the women artists of Abstract Expressionism. Making an unflinching use of feminist psychoanalytic theory, she argues for a more significant maternal relation in the human psyche’s development than traditional psychoanalysis allows. This perspective brings into visibility occluded modes of feeling and understanding that women’s art, fragilely, preserves. The image and the story of Marilyn Monroe is woven into the texture of the argument, upsetting the decade’s transcendent image of “woman” and revealing the patriarchal insecurities it represented.’Laura Mulvey, Professor of Film Studies, Birkbeck, University of London‘A book that reveals art history as a concerted and difficult and passionate business – a contest, a battle, in short, a lived experience.’Alexander Nemerov, Carl and Marilynn Thoma Provostial Professor in the Arts and Humanities, Stanford University -- .Table of ContentsIntroduction1 Prophecy, 19562 Five essays on sexuality (and art)3 What did Greenberg not say, or dare to think?4 Is the gesture male?5 Is the artist hysterical?6 Massacred women do not make me laugh, nor do the agonies of Marilyn Monroe’s body7 Dancing space: Prophecy to Sun Woman I8 Three memories: Rosenberg and MonroeAppendix: Sexual differenceIndex
£65.51
Design Studio Press Rey’s Anatomy
Book Synopsis
£27.19
Bloomsbury Publishing PLC European Women in Persian Houses: Western Images
Book SynopsisDuring the course of the 19th century, a relatively modern medium entered the private space of Iranian houses of the wealthy and became a popular feature of interior design in Persia. This was print media - lithographed images on paper and postcards - and their subject was European women. These idealised images adorned houses across the country throughout the Qajar period and this trend was particularly fashionable in Isfahan and mural decorations at the entrance gate of the Qaysarieh bazaar. The interest in images of Western women was an unusual bi-product of Iran's early political and cultural encounters with the West. In a world where women were rarely seen in public and, even then, were heavily veiled, the notion of European women dressed in - by Iranian standards - elegant and revealing clothing must have sparked much curiosity and some titillation among well-to-do merchants and aristocrats who felt the need to create some association, however remote, with these alien creatures. The introduction of such images began during the Safavid era in the 17th century with frescoes in royal palaces. This spread to other manifestations in the form of tile work and porcelain in the Qajar era, which became a testament to the popularity of this visual phenomenon among Iran's urban elite in the 19th and early 20th century. Parviz Tanavoli, the prominent Iranian artist and sculptor, here brings together the definitive collection of these unique images. European Women in Persian Houses will be essential for collectors and enthusiasts interested in Iranian art, culture and social history.Table of ContentsPreface Part I Zan-e Farangi (Farangi Woman) Occidentalism Iran in the Late 19th Century The Appearance of European Women in Persian Painting Images of European Women in th e 17th Century in Iran Sukiasian House Part II Return of Images of Farangi Women in Iran Images of Farangi Women in Later Persian Houses Use of Original Western Prints of Images of European Women Mirror Rooms Shahshahani House Zavelian House House of Mushir al-Mulk Homa’i House Trays Part III Iranian Contribution Farangi Women on Rugs and Other Media Fatima Farangi Women on Rugs, Qalamkars, and Tiles
£120.00
Kehrer Verlag Betweenness
Book Synopsis
£36.80
The University of Chicago Press Rembrandts Jews
Book Synopsis
£20.00
Yale University Press Kings Queens and Courtiers
Book SynopsisProvides an overview of French art circa 1500, a dynamic, transitional period when the country, resurgent after the dislocations of the Hundred Years' War, invaded Italy and all media flourished.Trade Review"American readers are well served by the more compact, beautifully illustrated English version. Recommended."—W. Cahn, Choice -- W. Cahn * Choice *
£38.00
Yale University Press Maternity
Book SynopsisOn the African continent, images of mothers and children are found wherever the visual arts are, from early rock-art sites in Egypt and the Sahara to the contemporary arts of South Africa. Discoveredin a variety of materials, from stone, ivory, and metals to beadwork, wood, and even paintings, images of maternity enlivenvirtually every type of object made in the region. Defining maternity as a biological and cultural phenomenon, the author goes beyond obvious notions of fertility to consider the importance of maternity in thought, ritual action, and worldview. Maternity images of all eras evoke deep and significant messages well beyond what meets the eye.Distributed for Mercatorfonds
£999.99
Yale University Press William Hunter and the Anatomy of the Modern
Book SynopsisWilliam Hunter and the Anatomy of the Modern Museum accompanies a groundbreaking exhibition organized by the Hunterian at the University of Glasgow, in collaboration with the Yale Center for British Art, to celebrate the 2018 tercentenary of The Hunterian's founder, Dr. William Hunter (17181783). This publication is the first in 150 years to assess the contribution made by Hunter, the Scottish-born obstetrician, anatomist, and collector, to the development of the modern museum as a public institution. Essays examine how Hunter gathered his collection to be used as a source of knowledge and instruction, encompassing outstanding paintings and works on paper, coins and medals, and anatomical and zoological specimens. Hunter also possessed ethnographic artifacts from Spain, the Middle East, China, and the South Pacific, and was an avid collector of medieval manuscripts and incunabula; these were all located within one of the most important working libraries of eighteenth-century London. Published by the Yale Center for British Art in association with The HunterianExhibition Schedule:The Hunterian, Glasgow (09/28/1801/06/19)Yale Center for British Art (02/14/1905/20/19)Trade Review“There is, as the exhibition and [this] scholarly catalog demonstrate, a thread running through this collection, a way of thinking associated with the Enlightenment that led William Hunter to spend decades gathering artifacts and then specifying that they be housed in a posthumous museum.”—Edward Rothstein, Wall Street Journal“Hunter’s book, the subject of an essay by Mungo Campbell, is one of the most remarkable and also most beautiful medical publications of its time.” —Duncan Macmillan, The Art NewspaperLong listed for the Historians of British Art Book Prize
£47.50
Yale University Press The Woman in White
Book SynopsisTrade Review“[The Woman in White] argues that Hiffernan was more collaborator than victim, an assessment that strives to write her into history as Whistler’s indispensable partner.”—Gioia Diliberto, Wall Street Journal“[A] lavish volume . . . illuminating . . . Ms. MacDonald’s deep research has corrected some misinformation and unearthed important new facts.” —Gioia Diliberto, Wall Street Journal“The Woman in White examines the relationship between the prickly American painter and the muse-mistress who modeled for his haunting ‘Symphonies in White’ . . . [and] argues that the two formed a symbiotic partnership.”—Michael Dirda, Washington Post (“This Season’s Hidden Gems”)“There are…illuminating chapters retelling Hiffernan’s biography and the story of her relationship with Whistler, alongside fascinating and new discoveries pertaining to the physical makeup of The Woman in White, its materiality, and its legacy, once more emphasising the formalist facets of white on white as a premodernist theme.”—Marte Stinis, British Association of Victorian Studies Newsletter
£38.00
University of California Press Faces of Power
Book SynopsisDuring his reign and following his death, the physiognomy of Alexander the Great was one of the most famous in history, adorning numerous works of art. This study demonstrates how the various portraits transmit not so much a likeness of Alexander as a set of cliches that symbolized the ruler.
£70.40
Harvard University Press The Image of the Black in Western Art Volume III
Book SynopsisEurope and the World Beyond focuses geographically on peoples of South America and the Mediterranean as well as Africa, but conceptually it emphasizes the ways that visual constructions of blacks mediated between Europe and a faraway African continent that was impinging ever more closely on daily life in cities and ports engaged in the slave trade.Trade ReviewThis volume, part of a monumental series about the depiction of black peoples in Western art history, covers the period from the Renaissance and Baroque eras into the imperialism and colonialism of the 18th century… The volume is richly illustrated with artworks from many sources in a wide variety of media… This volume and the rest of the series has inestimable value in furthering understanding of how attitudes toward issues of race have evolved. -- Eugene C. Burt * Library Journal (starred review) *Inspired to collect images of Africans and the diaspora during the height of the Civil Rights movement, Dominique Schlumberger de Menil and her husband John amassed over 30,000 images as an artistic and academic counter against racism. These images were sorted, studied, and grouped into a series of volumes originally published in the late 1970s and early 1980s; long out of print, they are now beautifully reproduced along with additional color plates and scholarly commentary. This edition focuses on the depictions of blacks during the 16th–18th centuries. Due to Eurocentric attitudes of the time, few works depict black individuals; rather, people of African descent were often studied at an anthropological level and commonly depicted as pages, slaves, or servants. Though the series has rightfully become embraced by academia, even armchair historians will find the book to be a feast of information and commentary. Digressions on the black Magus and the debate about the race of Madonna and Jesus are fascinating, but it is the breathtaking collection of artwork that makes the greatest impact. The rich and varied array, printed on high-quality paper, must be seen to be fully appreciated. * Publishers Weekly (starred review) *Monumental and groundbreaking volumes…[with] beautifully reproduced and thought-provoking images… A vast array of different ‘Images of the Black’ appear in these volumes, from statues of black saints such as St. Maurice or St. Benedict the Moor, to portraits of notable African ambassadors and kings, poets and musicians, or drawings of literary characters such as Shakespeare’s Othello, Aphra Behn’s Oroonoko, or Yarico from George Colman’s Inkle and Yarico… Africans have been painted and sculpted by some of the most eminent artists in the Western tradition, including Titian, Tiepolo, Rubens, Rembrandt, Van Dyck, Reynolds, Hogarth, Watteau and Gainsborough. More importantly, they have not been caricatured, but sensitively portrayed by these masters, their humanity captured on canvas for all to see… In placing such a vast variety of different images together, both positive and negative, these volumes show that the ‘Image of the Black’ was not at all homogenous but rather reflected the wide range of the Western response to the ‘other.’ …Seen through the prism of ‘Western Art,’ these ‘Images of the Black’ often tell us more about the Europeans and their agendas than the Africans they portray. Nonetheless, the cumulative effect of the images is to demonstrate a continuous black presence in the Western imagination and experience… This series will pose new questions to scholars of art, history and literature and provoke us all to reconsider the role of ‘the Black’ in Western civilization. -- Miranda Kaufmann * Times Literary Supplement *A fascinating story of the changing image of Africa’s people in Western art. The images are simply extraordinary and the scholarship inspiring. Anyone who cares about Western art or about Africa and her diaspora ought to know these magnificent volumes. -- Kwame Anthony AppiahIn addition to being an indispensable guide to the evolving meanings of racial difference, these dazzling volumes filled with extraordinary images and rich arguments contribute to an alternative history of the Western world. An invaluable gift for both specialists and general readers. -- Paul Gilroy, author of The Black Atlantic: Modernity and Double Consciousness
£67.16
Louisiana State University Press Uncovering Paris
Book SynopsisEmphasizing the role of erotic entertainment as an outlet and agent of modern sensibilities, Uncovering Paris: Scandals and Nude Spectacles in the Belle Epoque offers a fresh approach to important topics of the period - Bohemian artists, the New Woman, and press censorship - and reinterprets them through the lens of la femme nue.
£999.99
Watson-Guptill Publications Human Anatomy Made Amazingly Easy
Book SynopsisA manual of techniques that visually simplify and refine the study of the body's muscles and skeleton into concepts that can easily be used by beginning and intermediate artists alike. It offers tips such as how to self-check the proportions of the head and body to make sure they are accurate.
£14.39
Liverpool University Press Signs of Cleopatra
Book SynopsisIn addition, by restoring these works to their original context – political, philosophical and aesthetic – the author opens up unexpected new readings of images and texts which had previously appeared to be self-explanatory.The purpose of this book is to raise questions about how these images of a dead Egyptian queen were read.Trade ReviewMary Hamer has written a fascinating study of politics and desire, authority and sexuality, through the protean figure of Cleopatra. Barbara JohnsonAn example of the best kind of research on a female figure whose resonance in myth/history carries a weight of baggage that needs feminist investigation. Naomi Segal, University of LondonThe book is far stronger than a lot of recent competitors and is much more sensitively written. Sally-Ann Ashton, Fitzwilliam Museum, CambridgeSigns of Cleopatra’s very rigorous engagement with art history and the Cleopatra icon makes it particularly useful for courses on art history, visual culture and women’s studies… Especially valuable are the coherent readings of visual images, supported by fantastic illustrations. Francesca RoysterTable of Contents List of plates Preface to the 2008 edition Acknowledgements Introduction 1. Looking like a queen 2. Cleopatra: housewife 3. Newton and Cleopatra 4. Spaced out: Cleopatra and the citizen-king 5. A body for Cleopatra Notes Afterword: Cleopatra in the twenty-first century: The debate over race Bibliography Index
£27.10
Reaktion Books Darker Shades: The Racial Other in Early Modern
Book SynopsisDifference exists; otherness is constructed. This book asks how important Western artists, from Giotto to Titian and Caravaggio, and from Bosch to D rer and Rembrandt, shaped the imaging of non-Western individuals in early modern art. Victor I. Stoichita's nuanced and detailed study examines images of racial otherness during a time of new encounters of the West with different cultures and peoples, such as those with dark skins: Muslims and Jews. Featuring a host of informative illustrations and crossing the disciplines of art history, anthropology, and postcolonial studies, Darker Shades also reconsiders the Western canon's most essential facets: perspective, pictorial narrative, composition, bodily proportion, beauty, color, harmony, and lighting. What room was there for the "Other," Stoichita would have us ask, in such a crystalline, unchanging paradigm?
£28.50
Liverpool University Press The Reclining Nude: Agnès Varda, Catherine
Book SynopsisThe figure of a woman reclining, in repose, displayed, abandoned, fallen, asleep, or dreaming, returns in the work of women filmmakers and photographers in the twentieth and twenty-first centuries. Filmmakers Agnès Varda and Catherine Breillat, and American photographer working in Paris, Nan Goldin, return to the paintings of Titian, Velázquez, Goya, Courbet, and others, re-imagining, and re-purposing, their images of female beauty, display, (auto)eroticism, and intimacy. This book, a sensuous evocation of these feminist works, claims a female-identified pleasure in looking. The artists explored align images of repose and sensuality with other images of horizontality and proneness, of strong emotional content, images of erotic involvement, of vulnerability, of bodily contortion, of listlessness, grief, and depression. The reclining nude is for all three artists a starting point for a reflection on the relation of film, projections, and still photography, to painting, and a sustained re-imagining of the meanings conjured through serial returns to a particular pose. This book claims that the image of the reclining nude is compelling, for female-identified artists – and for all allied in feeling and picturing femininity – in the sensitive, ethically adventurous, politically complex feminist issues it engages. The reclining nude is an image of passivity, of submission, of hedonism. It allows thought about passivity as pleasure, about depression and grief figured posturally, about indolence as a form of resistance and anarchy. Through this image, female-identified artists have claimed freedom to offer new focus on these extremes of emotion. They are re-imagining horizontality.Trade ReviewReviews ‘This book is a deep and far-reaching exploration of the sensory impressions, affective impact, and gender-ideological import of films and photographs by three women—Agnès Varda, Catherine Breillat, and Nan Goldin. The author wisely focuses on an important but underexamined area of these women’s work: images of the reclining nude.'Douglas Keesey, California Polytechnic State UniversityTable of ContentsContentsAcknowledgementsIllustrationsshorelineThe Reclining Nudefour reflections on reclining: 1four reflections on reclining: 2four reflections on reclining: 3four reflections on reclining: 4VardaBreillatGoldinIndia SongBibliography and Filmography
£109.50
Liverpool University Press Sk-interfaces
Book SynopsisSkin represents a place where art, science, philosophy and social culture intersect. With a growing number of bodily extensions and the continuous discovery of new areas – physical, virtual and psychological – the clear distinctive lines between individuals, countries and even species are beginning to blur. Advances in bio-medical research together with deconstructivist theories in philosophy are reflected in the work of many artists using skin, materially or metaphorically, as an interface, whose work goes beyond the descriptive surface of the skin, to explore issues of xeno-transplants, trans-species and trans-racial exchanges. In recent years, a trend towards the analysis of skin, its functions and meanings, has emerged in the practice of many artists using wet biology, bio-architecture and self-experimentation. Jens Hauser has been involved in much of the development in this area. Bound in a unique thermochromic cover (designed by artist Zane Berzina), this book provides an engaging, critical and thought-provoking approach to how current technologies are changing our perceptions of the body, the self and the interactions between bodies. Edited by one of the leading curators in (bio)technology based art and including contributions from 25 major international artists, scholars and critics in this field, this provocative art and text book examining some of the most contentious moral, aesthetical and philosophical issues of our day will complement the exhibition and encourage debate within this exponentially growing field.Trade ReviewAnd what a book it is! Liverpool University Press has taken academic publishing into the next phase with this book in its integration of various modes for representing knowledge production. Richard Cavell... this book reacts to the body heat of the reader, [the cover]changing colour on contact, fading from bright orange to reveal a whitesurface with a texture not that far from some kind of skin...the book endpapers also reveal printed skin patterns...If the complexity of these external and internal surfaces intrigues you, then so will the ideas contained within them.Times Higher Education SupplementTable of Contents Welcoming sk-interfaces to FACT – Mike Stubbs Culturing Change – Marta Rupérez Who’s Afraid of the In-Between? – Jens Hauser The Return of Marsyas: Creative Skin – Stéphane Dumas McLuhan and the Body as Medium – Richard Cavell Endogenous Design of Biofacts: Tissues and Networks in Bio Art and Life Science – Nicole C. Karafyllis Fitter, Better, Stronger, Faster – John A. Hunt e-skin: Research into Wearable Interfaces, Cross-modal Perception and Communication for the Visually Impaired on the Mediated Stage – Jill Scott Feel Me, Touch Me: The hymNext Project – Julia Reodica In the Face of the Victim: Confronting the Other in the Tissue Culture and Art Project – Adele Senior Harlequin Coat – Orlan Secularism, Preface from Michel Serres, The Troubadour of Knowledge The Fusional Haptics of Art Orienté pbjet – Marion Laval-Jeantet Marsyas – beside myself – Kira O’Reilly Extra Ear: Ear on Arm – Stelarc The Telepresence Garment – Eduardo Kac World Skin: A photo safari in a land of war – Maurice Benayoun Why Immolation? – Critical Art Ensemble The Office of Experiments’ Truth Serum Threat: Notes on the Psychopharmacology of Truthfulness – Nicolas Langlitz Wim Delvoye’s Sybille II – Ralf Kotschka Immobile, Bleu... Remix! – Yann Marussich Biological Habitat: Developing Living Spaces – Zbigniew Oksiuta Light, only light – Jun Takita The Midas Project – Paul Thomas Re-thinking Touch – Zane Berzina Olivier Goulet’s SkinBag Corps.EXT – Fabienne Stahl Biographies Funders and Supporters sk-index
£109.50
National Gallery Company Ltd The National Gallery: An Illustrated History
Book SynopsisThe National Gallery started life in 1824 when the British government purchased the collection of 38 pictures belonging to the estate of wealthy banker John Julius Angerstein. As there was no suitable space available to display the collection, the pictures were put on display in Angerstein’s former home in Pall Mall. It was only in 1838 that the collection moved to its current site in Trafalgar Square. The building and collection have continued to expand ever since; today, the National Gallery houses one of the world’s greatest collections of western European paintings. This book brings together the stories behind the founding and growth of the National Gallery: the generous benefactors, the architectural controversies, the protracted acquisitions, the dedicated staff, and the visiting public. Generously illustrated, it aims to give insight into the history of the people and events that have helped shape this much-loved national institution.Published by National Gallery Company/Distributed by Yale University Press
£12.99
Paul Holberton Publishing Ltd Painting Childhood
Book SynopsisChildren have always fascinated artists and Painting Childhood will explore some of the most iconic paintings of children produced over the past 500 years. Featuring stunning portraits, amusing genre scenes and touching ‘fancy pictures’, the book will examine both the creative process and the specifi c challenges posed by painting children: from how to capture the fleeting moments of youth to how to encourage young subjects to sit still. Accompanying the exhibitions Painting Childhood: From Holbein to Freud and Childhood Now, the book will discuss a wealth of masterpieces from British collections by artists including Hans Holbein the Younger, Anthony van Dyck, Jan Steen, Bartolomé Esteban Murillo, William Hogarth, Joshua Reynolds, Thomas Gainsborough, Johan Zoff any and John Everett Millais. These iconic paintings will be considered alongside the preparatory sketches that were made for them and the works that were made after them in an exploration of the creative process and the artistic ‘conversations’ that occurred throughout the centuries. Painting Childhood will also explore ‘intimate portraits’ – artist’s portrayals of their own children. Paintings, sketches and sculptures by Stanley Spencer, Louise Bourgeois, Jacob Epstein and Lucian Freud, among others, present highly personal insights into the place of family within an artist’s life, and the ongoing dialogue between biography and creativity. This theme extends to the present day, and the work of three contemporary figurative painters - Chantal Joffe, Mark Fairnington and Matthew Krishanu. Drawn to children as subjects, each of these London-based artists depict childhood in very diff erent ways. Together, they provide fresh perspectives on what constitutes childhood today and reaffirm the place of painting as a diverse and powerful artistic practice.
£15.68
Taylor & Francis Art Awakening and Modernity in the Middle East
a huge range and FREE tracked UK delivery on ALL orders.
£43.99
Taylor & Francis Albrecht Durer and the Depiction of Cultural Differences in Renaissance Europe
a huge range and FREE tracked UK delivery on ALL orders.
£135.00
Taylor & Francis Constructing the Viennese Modern Body Art Hysteria and the Puppet Studies in Art Historiography
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£39.99
Taylor & Francis Ltd An Intimate Distance Women Artists and the Body
a huge range and FREE tracked UK delivery on ALL orders.
£128.25
Taylor & Francis The Athenian Woman An Iconographic Handbook
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£128.25
Taylor & Francis The Athenian Woman An Iconographic Handbook
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£39.99
Taylor & Francis The Black Female Body in American Literature and Art
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£51.29
Taylor & Francis Ltd The Art of Drawing Folds An Illustrators Guide to Drawing the Clothed Figure
a huge range and FREE tracked UK delivery on ALL orders.
£128.25
Cambridge University Press Picturing Women in Renaissance and Baroque Italy
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£37.04
Cambridge University Press Children in the Visual Arts of Imperial Rome
Book SynopsisIn this 2005 study, Jeannine Uzzi examines the ruling elite's notions of what it meant to be Roman by examining images of children in Roman imperial art. Roman children are most often shown in depictions of peaceful public gatherings before the emperor, whereas non-Roman children appear only in scenes of submission, triumph, or violent military activity.Table of Contents1. Introduction: the question; 2. Evidence, methodology, and the child image; 3. Imperial largesse; 4. Public gathering; 5. Anaglypha Traiani/Hadriani; 6. Submission; 7. Triumph; 8. Battle ground; 9. Ara Pacis; 10. Conclusion: a narrative of identity; Appendix. Children in nonofficial imagery.
£85.72
Phaidon Press Ltd 500 Autorretratos Nueva Edicin Actualizada 500
Book Synopsis
£33.10
Schiffer Publishing Ltd Bodies of WorkContemporary Figurative Painting
Book SynopsisTrade ReviewSummer must-read. -- Watercolor Artist Magazine
£41.39
Bloomsbury Publishing PLC Consuming the Body
Book SynopsisDawn Woolley is an artist and research fellow at Leeds Arts University examining consumer culture, social media, and gender. She completed an MA in Photography (2008) and PhD by project in Fine Art (2017) at the Royal College of Art. Her artwork is a feminist critique of consumer culture, encompassing photography, video, installation, and performance to draw attention issues of sexualisation, objectification, and idealisation. Recent solo exhibitions include; Consumed: Stilled Lives', Perth Centre for Photography, Australia (2021) and Dance for Good & Exercise Your Rights' in collaboration with Davin Watne, Public Space One gallery, Iowa City (2020).Trade ReviewA brilliant analysis of consumerism exposing how we are manipulated by capitalism seeking to turn our subjectivity into an object for corporate profit. By drilling into the shiny surface of corporate deceit Consuming the Body uncovers ways to resist the deceptions foisted on us. * Peter Kennard, Professor of Political Art, Royal College of Art, UK *What are we to do with the idealised mirror-images that capitalism beams at us through social media, making us all fetishists and hysterics? Consuming the Body is written urgently but elegantly, finally offering ways of thinking outside this dangerous box. * Professor Naomi Segal, Honorary Fellow, Institute of Modern Languages Research, University of London, UK *This book is a fascinating take on selfie culture and beyond, taking up classic feminist psychoanalytic discussions of the fetishistic gaze to think about the impact of social networks, cosmetic surgery, health surveillance and the ‘sadistic commands’ of capitalist consumer culture. Focusing on the increasingly blurred lines between neoliberal self-surveillance and neurosis, the book explores how hysteria, anorexia and bulimia share much with contemporary online imperatives around fitness, health and beauty. Offering some solace through activist work on social networks, the book proposes that selfie culture needs a new set of rules for it to become a space of empowerment and to loosen the disciplinary control that it exerts. * Catherine Grant, Senior Lecturer, Art and Visual Cultures department, Goldsmiths, University of London, UK *Selfies and social media have an image problem - in more ways than one. In this compelling book, Dawn Woolley challenges the narrow stereotypes criticising how bodies are portrayed in these digital media. She elucidates their complex meanings, practices and politics, and in doing so, recuperates their value, particularly for women with non-normative bodies. * Deborah Lupton, SHARP Professor, Centre for Social Research in Health and Social Policy Research Centre, UNSW Sydney, Australia *Dawn Woolley offers up an exciting and eloquent exploration of the often sadistic ways that contemporary capitalism compels us to consume. Importantly Woolley gives us valuable insight into radical self-presentation approaches on social media that glitch and refuse the ‘ideal’ in order to empower a body’s presence. * Dr. Jacki Willson, Associate Professor in Performance and Gender, School of Performance and Cultural Industries, University of Leeds, UK *Table of ContentsList of Illustrations Acknowledgements Introduction 1 Sadistic Commands 2 The Fetishistic Gaze 3 Hystericized Insistent Presence 4 Self(ie) Discipline 5 The Hysteria Economy 6 The Clinical Fetishistic Gaze 7 Anti-Consumers and the Fetishistic Gaze 8 The Bulimic Economy 9 Empowering Presence Conclusion Bibliography Glossary Index
£90.00
Chronicle Books Drawn from Life Tips and Tricks for Contemporary
Book Synopsis
£20.66