Abstract Expressionist Painting in America
William C. Seitz
Dore Ashton
Robert Motherwell
Hardcover 1983
Byzantium
Rowena Loverance
In this introduction to the history of Byzantium, from the fourth to the fourteenth century, Rowena Loverance draws on the British Museum's rich collections of spectacular Byzantine silver, ivories, jewelry, and icons, as well as pieces from the empire's Persian and Germanic neighbors. This revised edition, featuring a new introduction, is updated to include the most recent finds and interpretations.
Paperback 2004
Circa 1600
S. J. Freedberg
Hardcover 1983 / Paperback
Early Mughal Painting
Milo Cleveland Beach
Beach traces, with an abundance of captivating illustrations, the evolution of the Mughal style. While acknowledging the influence of Akbar the Great's interests and changing tastes, he shows that many of the new tendencies were evident during the short reign of Akbar's father, the Emperor Humayun, whose role as patron of the arts is thereby reassessed. Beach also stresses the traditionalism of the individual painters, who only gradually changed their concepts and compositions in response to foreign influences and to imperial taste.
Hardcover 1987
Edward Lear as a Landscape Draughtsman
Philip Hofer
Edward Lear has been known best as the author of "The Owl and the Pussycat," the famous Nonsense Books, and other verses and songs. But landscape drawing and painting were his lifelong profession--the nonsense a side line. In this volume, Hofer presents a selection of Lear's landscape drawings chosen from his own collection.
Hardcover 1967
Manga from the Floating World
Adam L. Kern
Manga from the Floating World is the first full-length study in English of the kibyôshi, a genre of sophisticated pictorial fiction from late-eighteenth-century Japan. By combining analysis of the socioeconomic and historical milieus in which the genre was produced with three annotated translations of works by author-artist Santô Kyôden (1761-1816), Adam Kern offers a close reading of the vibrant popular imagination of the mid-Edo period. Based on extensive research using primary sources in their original Edo editions and illustrated with rare prints from Japanese archival collections, these entertaining works will appeal to the general reader as well as to the more experienced student of Japanese cultural history.
Hardcover 2007
Numismatic Art in America
Cornelius C. Vermeule
Hardcover 1971
Toulouse-Lautrec
Peter A. Wick
This catalogue documents a collection of 24 black and white reproductions of book covers and brochures illustrated by Toulouse-Latrec housed in the Department of Printing and Graphic Arts at the Houghton Library. This is a sequel to Philip Hofer's A Bestiary by Toulouse-Lautrec.
Paperback 2005
The Work of Stephen Harvard
David P. Becker
Calligrapher, stonecutter, illustrator, and type designer, Harvard's art and craftsmanship were rooted equally in the history of the book and the natural world. At his untimely death in 1988, he left a body of work that explored his dream of an ideal alphabet, 'a perfect, proportionate set of images that shine with a pythagorean light,' a dream that Harvard found as compelling and impossible 'as the search for perpetual motion.' Becker's lovingly edited and sumptuously illustrated catalog bears out Harvard's conviction that typography, which is at once art and craft, must 'strive to satisfy the intelligence and not the intelligentsia.'
Paperback 2005
The Yellow Book
Margaret D. Stetz
Mark Samuels Lasner
A commemorative exhibition of the one-hundredth anniversary of The Yellow Book, the most important and notorious British magazine in the 1890's, the first to include market high Culture to mass audiences in England and America through modern advertising strategies. It includes a 40-page essay, illustrations, and a cheklist of the exhibition held at Houghton Library in 1994.
Paperback 2005