Search results for ""Museum of Modern Art""
Museum of Modern Art Bogdanovic by Bogdanovic: Yugoslav Memorials through the Eyes of their Architect
£32.00
Museum of Modern Art Art Making with MoMA: 20 Activities for Kids Inspired by Artists
£17.06
Museum of Modern Art Robert Rauschenberg: Thirty-Four Illustrations for Dante’s Inferno
£17.95
Museum of Modern Art Robert Heinecken: Object Matter
Robert Heinecken (1931-2006) was a pioneer in the postwar Los Angeles art scene who described himself as a para-photographer because his work stood ‘beside’ or ‘beyond’ traditional ideas of the medium. Published in conjunction with the first museum exhibition of the artist’s work since his death in 2006, this publication covers four decades of his remarkable and unique practice, from the early 1960s through the late 1990s, with special emphasis on his early experimentations with technique and materiality, which destabilized the very definition of photography. Culling images from newspapers, magazine advertisements, and television, Heinecken re-contextualized them through collage and assemblage, double-sided photograms, photolithography and re-photography. Although he was rarely behind the lens of a camera, his photo-based works question the nature of photography and radically redefine the perception of it as an artistic medium. As the most comprehensive survey of Heinecken’s oeuvre, this book sets his work in the context of twentieth century history of photographic experimentation and conceptual art. An illustrated essay by conservator Jennifer Jae Gutierrez about the artist’s experimental techniques, which ranged from photograms to photolithography to collage, contributes to the sparse scholarship on Heinecken’s working methods.
£28.80
Museum of Modern Art Weimar Cinema, 1919-1933: Daydreams and Nightmares
Published in conjunction with the Museum’s presentation of 75 featurelength films from theWeimar era, many of them only recently restored, Weimar Cinema 1919-1933: Daydreams and Nightmares reconsiders the broad spectrum of influential German films made between the world wars. Both films made in Germany and those made in America by the émigré filmmakers who arrived in Hollywood before Hitler took power deeply affected American cinema. Weimar Cinema is the first comprehensive survey of this period to include popular cinema – musicals, comedies, the ‘daydreams’ of the working class – along with the ‘nightmarish’ classics such as Fritz Lang’s Dr.Mabuse der Spieler and M, F.W. Murnau’s Nosferatu: Eine Symphonie des Grauens and G.W. Pabst’s Pandora’s Box. Richly illustrated with film stills, the book examines how our understanding of these films has changed in the last half century and investigates important themes in films from this period, including the portrayal of women and the role of sound. Supplementing the essays is a detailed illustrated filmography of the 75 films featured in the programme; each film is accompanied by a brief description and excerpts from reviews.
£23.85
Museum of Modern Art Workspheres: Design and Contemporary Work Styles
Workspheres is the catalogue of MoMA's Spring exhibition devoted to the way we work and the role of design in creating effective solutions for work tools and environments in the near future. The exhibition features nine concepts for work tools and environments designed to represent solutions to the specific needs of nine unique sets of work ambitions, problems, skills and requirements. Each has been assigned to individual teams of architects and designers and is based on extensive research in consultation with an international advisory group. This catalogue not only represents the exhibition, but also expands upon it. While the main body of the volume is devoted to the nine models, the history of workplace design and an analysis of offices, both national and global, will also be included in a series of six essays by internationally known designers. In addition to history and cultural differences, the publication also addresses such themes as individuality within a work organization, communication design, interface design, and the impact of digital technologies on different professions.
£22.46
Museum of Modern Art Kahlo: Self-Portrait with Cropped Hair
£10.95
Museum of Modern Art Complexity and Contradiction at fifty: Studies toward an Ongoing Debate
£31.50
Museum of Modern Art Inventing the Modern
£36.00
Museum of Modern Art member: Pope.L, 1978–2001
£28.80
Museum of Modern Art Jacob Lawrence: The Migration Series
£25.20
Museum of Modern Art OBJECT: PHOTO: Modern Photographs: The Thomas Walther Collection 1909-1949
OBJECT:PHOTO shifts the dialogue about modernist photography from an emphasis on the subject and the image to the actual photographic object, created by a certain artist at a particular time and present today in its unique physicality. This shift is especially significant for a study of the period during which photography developed a distinctive formal language. A growing awareness of the rarity of images made between the two world wars has altered historians’ considerations, encouraging new approaches privileging the originality of each work and the density of references each contains. This richly illustrated publication culminates a four-year collaborative research endeavor between The Museum of Modern Art’s Departments of Photography and Conservation, and nearly 30 visiting scholars, on the material and aesthetic evolution of avant-garde photography in the early twentieth century. The 341 modernist photographs known as The Thomas Walther Collection, a major museum acquisition made in 2001, is presented in its entirety, establishing a new standard of depth for the medium. Essays by curators, researchers, and conservators consider the history of collecting from this era to the present and how deepening knowledge has shifted the perspective on the medium; the material facts of the Walther pictures as a baseline for understanding the development of photographic materials in this era; and how the intellectual formation of the writers of critical photographic publications of the era and the societal and cultural pressures of that historical moment inflected the photography’s sense of its own history. Together with thematic, object-based case studies of groups of pictures that demonstrate new approaches in specific, divergent examples, these contributions reanimate the dialogue on this formative era in photography.
£40.50
Museum of Modern Art Jasper Johns
£9.27
Museum of Modern Art Henri Labrouste: Structure Brought to Light
£31.50
Museum of Modern Art The Photographer's Eye
The Photographer’s Eye, available again after some years out of print, offers a guide to the medium’s visual language through works by such early masters as Atget, Cartier-Bresson, Evans, Strand and Weston. In this re-issue, 172 illustrations reveal the extraordinary range of the photograph from the early days of the medium’s development to the mid-1960s. They are accompanied by an essay from Szarkowski, one of the most influential photography curators and critics of our time.
£19.95
Museum of Modern Art Contemporary Voices: Works from The UBS Art Collection
This visually exciting book presents a selection of signature works by European and American artists of the postwar generations, drawn from the UBS Art Collection, one of the richest and most varied holdings of international contemporary art in the United States. This unique publication accompanies an exhibition of seventy-four of these outstanding works of art, including forty-four works that were a gift to The Museum of Modern Art in 2002. The works reproduced here include paintings, sculptures, drawings, photographs and mixed-media works by a wide and varied array of important artists, including Joseph Beuys, Chuck Close, Jasper Johns, Anselm Kiefer, Brice Marden, Robert Rauschenberg, Susan Rothenburg, Ed Ruscha, Cindy Sherman, Kiki Smith, Cy Twombly, Andy Warhol and others. In addition, Ann Temkin has interviewed eleven of these artists for the book, producing illuminating conversations about how they work, the origins of their ideas and other topics. The artists interviewed include Vija Celmins, Damien Hirst, Susan Rothenburg, Ed Ruscha, Robert Ryman, Lorna Simpson and others. Finally, the book also contains an interview with Donald B. Marron, a former President of MoMA and the person who as Chairman of UBS began the collection.
£34.20
Museum of Modern Art Stephen Shore
£58.30
Museum of Modern Art Magritte's Apple
£15.36
Museum of Modern Art Boris Charmatz
£21.06
Museum of Modern Art Photography at MoMA: 1960 to Now - Volume II
£57.65
Museum of Modern Art Henri Matisse: The Cut-Outs
£51.24
Museum of Modern Art Girls Standing on Lawns
£11.84
Museum of Modern Art Pollock: One: Number 31, 1950
In the late 1940s, Jackson Pollock, now recognized as one of the most important Abstract Expressionist artists, began experimenting with a new method of painting that involved dripping, flinging and pouring paint onto a canvas laid flat on the ground. This process engaged his entire body, and the resulting images were a direct index of the energy he expended to create these works. One: Number 31 (1950), among the largest of the paintings he produced by this method, is a virtuoso showcase of his mastery of materials and technique. In this volume of the MoMA One on One series, a lively essay by former museum curator and professor Charles Stuckey offers an in-depth exploration of the painting, one of many groundbreaking works by Pollock in MoMA’s collection.
£12.29
Museum of Modern Art Wait Later This Will Be Nothing Editions by Dieter Roth
£31.50
Museum of Modern Art Bill Brandt Shadow and Light
£40.00
Museum of Modern Art Paul Sietsema: Figure 3
£20.98
Museum of Modern Art Joan Miró
£9.27
Museum of Modern Art Drawing from the Modern 1: 1880-1945
This is a new three volume series of fully illustrated books that chronologically showcase the Museum's collection of nearly 7000 works on paper. The series covers masterworks created from 1880 to 1945.
£30.38
Museum of Modern Art Manet and the Execution of Maximilian
£26.21
Museum of Modern Art Places
This is one of a series of books on modern art created to help very young people learn the basic vocabulary used by artists, a sort of ABC of art. This book isolates the key elements of place to see how places are depicted by artists and how they help to convey meaning in art. Notes at the back of each book provide brief background information that adults will find useful when talking with children about the images reproduced in these books.
£12.68
Museum of Modern Art The Universitas Project: Solutions for a Post-Technological Society
£27.65
Museum of Modern Art Ellsworth Kelly: Colors for a Large Wall
£14.99
Museum of Modern Art Romare Bearden: Patchwork Quilt
£14.95
Museum of Modern Art Picasso in Fontainebleau
£49.50
Museum of Modern Art Andy Warhol: Campbell’s Soup Cans
£14.95
Museum of Modern Art Cars! Cars! Cars!
£14.95
Museum of Modern Art Engineer, Agitator, Constructor: The Artist Reinvented
£34.20
Museum of Modern Art The Rainbow Flag: Bright, Bold, and Beautiful
£14.95
Museum of Modern Art Grandpa and the Library: How Charles White Learned to Paint
£14.95
Museum of Modern Art Photography at MoMA: 1840-1920
£49.50
Museum of Modern Art Sarah Michelson
£17.95
Museum of Modern Art Joaquín Torres-García: The Arcadian Modern
£36.00
Museum of Modern Art Robert Rauschenberg: Thirty-Four Drawings for Dante’s Inferno
£400.00
Museum of Modern Art Matisse’s Garden
£12.95
Museum of Modern Art Frederick Wiseman
In a career that spans more than four decades, FrederickWiseman has made thirty-eight films that together form a monumental chronicle of latetwentieth- century institutional and cultural life. The dilemmasWiseman poses in his films – moral, philosophical, legal, medical, technological, political, religious and aesthetic – are both urgent and vexing, from his controversial debut, Titicut Follies (1967), the only American film ever censored for reasons other than national security or obscenity, to his recent critical and commercial success La Danse – The Paris Opera Ballet (2009) and forthcoming film Boxing Gym (2010). FrederickWiseman, the first publication in English to provide a comprehensive overview ofWiseman’s work to date (including projects for theatre and opera), features original essays by a variety of distinguished writers, critics, filmmakers and actors, and byWiseman himself. Richly illustrated with stills from his films, this volume is an incisive examination of one of cinema’s most fearless and innovative filmmakers.
£23.85
Museum of Modern Art Bauhaus 1919-1933: Workshops for Modernity
£50.40
Museum of Modern Art The Judith Rothschild Foundation Contemporary Drawings Collection: Catalogue Raisonné
Formed by Harvey S. Shipley Miller, trustee of the Judith Rothschild Foundation, and given to MoMA in 2005, The Judith Rothschild Foundation Contemporary Drawings Collection was conceived to be a broad survey of contemporary drawing practice, and it more than fulfils that goal, mixing drawings of the 1960s and 1970s with major works of the past twenty years by such artists as Kai Althoff, Robert Crumb, Peter Doig, Marcel Dzama, Mark Grotjahn, Charline von Heyl, Martin Kippenberger, Sherrie Levine, Agnes Martin, Fred Sandback, Paul Thel and Andrea Zittel, among many others. This definitive catalogue raisonné presents the collection as a whole, with an introduction by Christian Rattemeyer; five essays each focusing on a different geographic area of artistic production; images throughout; and a text on paper conservation.
£34.20
Museum of Modern Art On Site: New Architecture in Spain
This is the first book to present an overview of the best Spanish architecture in the 21st century. Featuring 35 important architectural projects that will actually be in construction in 2006, the book reflects the geographic and generational diversity of the current wave of new projects and their architects, as well as a wide range of scales, from a private house to a new international airport.
£22.46