CHUCK CLOSE: Life and Work 1988-1995
First edition. A wonderful production with text by the award-winning playwrite and beautifully detailed full-color reproduction of the artist's later work.
First edition. A wonderful production with text by the award-winning playwrite and beautifully detailed full-color reproduction of the artist's later work.
Catalogue for an exhibition of this 17th-century French Baroque painter held at the National Gallery of Art. Contains many reproductions of de La Tour's paintings (many of which are important examples of chiaroscuro) along with several essays on his work.
This exhaustive catalog, published in English, Hebrew and Arabic, contains detailed images and descriptions of the inscribed gems collected by Benjamin Zucker.
An attractive catalog of traveling exhibitions prepared by the Museum of Modern Art and made available to universities, colleges, museums, and clubs, as well as educational programs offered to schools and teachers.
Exhibition catalog/brochure consisting of 26 large postcard-sized color reproductions of Crouwel's work. With a prefatory text by Crouwel, "The Discovery of the Wolfsonian."
Catalogue for an exhibition held at the Galeries Nationales du Grand Palais (Paris) and the Art Institute of Chicago. A retrospective of this key Impressionist painter's work.
Gallery catalog of 17 black and white plates of photograph emulsions on watercolor paper produced between 1992 and 1993. 35pp.
True first edition / printing of this moving full-color reproduction of the young and notes photographer's collaged journals.
Five catalogues printed on the occasion of the Venice Biennale, focusing on artists of the Nordic countries.
Introductory text (in French) by Max Ernst, followed by 19 plates reproducing drawings made in 1925. With a full list of 51 drawings exhibited at the Galerie Berggruen in 1956.
A captivating object, drawn by a child likely between the ages of 8 and 12, the cartoons depict a wide array of midcentury characters including Elmer Fudd, Dick Tracey, Archie (and company), Popeye, and Donald Duck, among many others from comic books, Sunday strips, television, and elsewhere.
Published on the occasion of the exhibition of the same name. Contains a full catalog of the exhibition including illustrations, most of which are in color, as well as several essays.
A scarce and important publication which apparently ran just one issue.
First issue of the bi-monthly arts magazine, featuring work by Dan Dailey, Betty Hahn, Chris Van Allsburg, David Macaulay, and others. Cover image by Chief Rolling Thunder.
Single issue of the long-running art zine helmed by Frank Gaard, a teacher at the Minneapolis College of Art and Design.
Printed in Paris by Horizons de France under the artistic direction of Maximilien Vox, with his design and typography throughout.
Text in French.
Guided by an entity she named "Myninterest," London housewife and spiritualist Madge Gill (1882– 1961) began making art in 1919, and thereafter created hundreds of automatic, Dada-esque drawings, predominantly ink (from the postcard size here to long rolls of muslin).
Catalog for an exhibition at the Victoria and Albert Museum and the National Gallery of Art in Washington, copiously illustrated with art, jewelry, decor and architecture.
1899 printing of the original 1869 edition, complete in two volumes.
Catalog for the exhibition of the same name at the Smithsonian Institution.
Wide-ranging survey of art by women held by the National Museum of Women in the Arts, beginning with 16th century European painters and ending with North American art and artists' books from the late 20th century.
Exhibition catalogue.
Hundreds of illustrations of Grosz's work depicting pre-Nazi Germany between the World Wars.