You may have to Search all our reviewed books and magazines, click the sign up button below to create a free account.
The seventeenth and eighteenth centuries represent a high point in the intersection between design and workmanship. Skilled artisans, creative and technically competent agents within their own field, worked across a wide spectrum of practice that encompassed design, supervision and execution, and architects relied heavily on the experience they brought to the building site. Despite this, the bridge between design and tacit artisanal knowledge has been an underarticulated factor in the architectural achievement of the early modern era. Building on the shift towards a collaborative and qualitative analysis of architectural production, Between Design and Making re-evaluates the social and profe...
Eric Dregni’s great-grandfather Ellef fled Norway in 1893 when it was the poorest country in Europe. More than one hundred years later, his great-grandson traveled back to find that—mostly due to oil and natural gas discoveries—it is now the richest. The circumstances of his return were serendipitous, as the notice that Dregni won a Fulbright Fellowship to go there arrived the same week as the knowledge that his wife Katy was pregnant. Braving a birth abroad and benefiting from a remarkably generous health care system, the Dregnis’ family came full circle when their son Eilif was born in Norway. In this cross-cultural memoir, Dregni tells the hair-raising, hilarious, and sometimes po...
"A companion to the exhibition Crafting America curated at Crystal Bridges Museum of American Art, this publication explores the interdisciplinary contexts of the assembled works, featuring contributions from scholars with expertise in art history, American studies, folklore, and museum studies. Essay topics include the significance of craft within Native American histories and explorations of craft's relationship to ritual and memory, personal independence, and abstraction"--
This book broadens the discussion of pottery and china in the Victorian era by situating them in the national, imperial, design reform, and domestic debates between 1840 and 1890. Largely ignored in recent scholarship, Ceramics in the Victorian Era: Meanings and Metaphors in Painting and Literature argues that the signification of a pot, a jug, or a tableware pattern can be more fully discerned in written and painted representations. Across five case studies, the book explores a rhetoric and set of conventions that developed within the representation of ceramics, emerging in the late-18th century, and continuing in the Victorian period. Each case study begins with a textual passage exemplify...
Printed transferwares had significant cultural impact as they were produced and exported around the world from the early 19th century. Melding historical enquiry with contemporary practice, this book illustrates how artists have re-appropriated this historical genre to observe, record, comment, and re-animate printed tablewares.
A reflective book about international contemporary art jewellery that aims to open up new points of view about what art jewellery is or can be.
The opening of Sigmund Bing’s gallery L’Art Nouveau had been an eagerly expected event in the Paris art world throughout the latter half of 1895, since Bing first announced that he would be soon exhibiting artistic furniture. The doors finally opened on 26 December 1895 as visitors poured in at 22 Rue de Provence to admire Bing’s collection. Beginning with Bing’s special feeling for Asian art, the author discusses his many other eclectic interests in art. Over 300 colour illustrations show the objects that were traded in his gallery: Tiffany glass, paintings and sculptures by Henri Toulouse Lautrec, Rodin, Claudel and Vuillard, as well furniture, ceramics and jewellery by Van de Velde, Colonna, De Feure and Gaillard. The book is based on extensive archive research, tracing destinations of the art objects that Bing traded to collectors and museums or sponsored personally. The authors show how one man, an art dealer, became an international trendsetter who influenced the canon in Europe and the US. The result is a renewed appreciation of Sigmund Bing’s role as the principal founder of the new style that carries the name of his gallery: Art Nouveau.
- The comprehensive monograph of the Norwegian conceptual artist Bård Breivik- Includes 875 stunning color and black & white imagesThe work of the Norwegian artist Bård Breivik unfolds over more than 1,000 pages in a stunning presentation of a career in sculpture and Conceptual art encompassing more than forty years. Thematically arranged source material, including interviews, sketches, anecdotes and reviews, elucidate the phenomenon that is Bård Breivik. The sheer volume of his oeuvre is also reflected in his choice of materials: he switches as if by sleight of hand between sand and snow, wood, rock and steel. In a series that has continued to evolve since 1986, he has persisted in worki...