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Sean Scully
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 186

Sean Scully

  • Categories: Art

Published on the occasion of the exhibition, Sean Scully: wall of light, organized by The Phillips Collection, Washington, D. C., October 22, 2005-January 8, 2006.

Readers, Advisors, and Storefront Churches
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 108

Readers, Advisors, and Storefront Churches

  • Categories: Art

Renee Stout lives and works in Washington, D.C., where she is strongly influenced by the cityÕs political, social, and religious composition. She looks to the belief systems of various African peoples and their New World descendants for direction and visual inspiration. Through her artwork Stout hopes to empower others to improve society by healing themselves. Her artwork seems to be a personal journey, which she invites fortunate travelers to share. Fictional narratives with imaginary characters accompany Stout along her path. Michelle A. Owen-Workman is an I.Ph.D. candidate at the University of Missouri-Kansas City specializing in non-European art and religious studies. Stephen Bennett Phillips is associate curator at The Phillips Collection in Washington, D.C.

Brett Weston
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 162

Brett Weston

  • Type: Book
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  • Published: 2008
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  • Publisher: Unknown

Published to accompany an exhibition of the same name held at the Oklahoma City Museum of Art, Mar. 20-May 18, 2008, and at The Phillips Collection, Washington, D.C., June 21-Sept. 7, 2008.

Twentieth-century Still-life Paintings from the Phillips Collection
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 120

Twentieth-century Still-life Paintings from the Phillips Collection

  • Categories: Art
  • Type: Book
  • -
  • Published: 1997-01-01
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  • Publisher: Collection

None

Wild Exuberance
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 168

Wild Exuberance

  • Categories: Art

Early in his career, critics and collectors widely recognized that Harold Weston (1894-1972), was capturing and saying something unusual in his paintings. "There is a young American painter," wrote Duncan Phillips, "who stirs in me the hope for a re-birth on this new soil of something that was not lost to the art of painting with the passing of Vincent van Gogh." Along with 104 color and ten black-and-white plates of Weston's works, the catalog includes essays that cover myriad aspects of Weston's life and art. The Adirondack Museum's chief curator Caroline M. Welsh explores nature and wilderness preservation as themes in twentieth-century art and places Weston in the context of his contemporaries who painted the Adirondacks. The biographical essay by the exhibition's guest curator Rebecca Foster follows the unfolding of a career in parallel to the unfolding of a life. Weston's rich technique is explored by Stephen Bennett-Phillips, curator at the Phillips Collection, in an analysis of the painting. Theodore E. Stebbins, Jr., curator of American art at the Fogg Art Museum, provides an introduction to the catalogue.

Mojo Workin'
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 251

Mojo Workin'

A bold reconsideration of Hoodoo belief and practice Katrina Hazzard-Donald explores African Americans' experience and practice of the herbal, healing folk belief tradition known as Hoodoo. She examines Hoodoo culture and history by tracing its emergence from African traditions to religious practices in the Americas. Working against conventional scholarship, Hazzard-Donald argues that Hoodoo emerged first in three distinct regions she calls "regional Hoodoo clusters" and that after the turn of the nineteenth century, Hoodoo took on a national rather than regional profile. The spread came about through the mechanism of the "African Religion Complex," eight distinct cultural characteristics fa...

Science Fiction
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 321

Science Fiction

  • Type: Book
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  • Published: 2005-05-06
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  • Publisher: Polity

In this new and timely cultural history of science fiction, Roger Luckhurst examines the genre from its origins in the late nineteenth century to its latest manifestations. The book introduces and explicates major works of science fiction literature by placing them in a series of contexts, using the history of science and technology, political and economic history, and cultural theory to develop the means for understanding the unique qualities of the genre. Luckhurst reads science fiction as a literature of modernity. His astute analysis examines how the genre provides a constantly modulating record of how human embodiment is transformed by scientific and technological change and how the ver...

Money and Materiality in the Golden Age of Graphic Satire
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 242

Money and Materiality in the Golden Age of Graphic Satire

  • Categories: Art

This book examines the entwined and simultaneous rise of graphic satire and cultures of paper money in late eighteenth- and early nineteenth-century Britain. Asking how Britons learned to value both graphic art and money, the book makes surprising connections between two types of engraved images that grew in popularity and influence during this time. Graphic satire grew in visual risk-taking, while paper money became a more standard carrier of financial value, courting controversy as a medium, moral problem, and factor in inflation. Through analysis of satirical prints, as well as case studies of monetary satires beyond London, this book demonstrates several key ways that cultures attach value to printed paper, accepting it as social reality and institutional fact. Thus, satirical banknotes were objects that broke down the distinction between paper money and graphic satire ​altogether.

Photography in the Middle: Dispatches on Media Ecologies and Aesthetics
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 178

Photography in the Middle: Dispatches on Media Ecologies and Aesthetics

It's easy to forget there's a war on when the front line is everywhere encrypted in plain sight. Gathered in this book's several chapters are dispatches on the role of photography in a War Universe, a space and time in which photographers such as Hilla Becher, Don McCullin and Eadweard Muybridge exist only insofar as they are a mark of possession, in the sway of larger forces. These photographers are conceptual personae that collectively fabulate a different kind of photography, a paraphotography in which the camera produces negative abyssal flashes or 'endarkenment.' In his Vietnam War memoir, Dispatches, Michael Herr imagines a 'dropped camera' receiving 'jumping and falling' images, image...