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  • Image  (3)
  • Berlin International  (3)
  • SB Oranienburg
  • Akad. der Künste
  • SB Prenzlau
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  • 1
    Image
    Image
    New York, NY, USA : Dorling Kindersley
    UID:
    kobvindex_INT0001714
    Format: 360 pages , illustrations (some colour) , 31 x 26.5 cm
    Edition: 1st American edition
    ISBN: 9780241226186 , 9781465463289 , 024122618X , 1465463283
    Content: "A stunning exploration of over 80 famous artists and their fascinating lives, from Leonardo da Vinci to Frida Kahlo. Artists: Their Lives and Works tells the inspiring stories behind the world's most famous masterpieces and their creators, including their influences, development, friendships, loves, and rivalries. Discover the often tumultuous lives of iconic artists including Raphael, Hogarth, van Gogh, O'Keeffe, Magritte, Warhol, and Kiefer. Uncover the unconventional tales of the artists' lives, including Holbein's matchmaking portraits for Henry VIII, Caravaggio's thuggish reactions to a badly-cooked artichoke, and the many romantic affairs of Picasso. Lavishly illustrated biographies for every artist reveal these visionaries at work in their studios, as well as the unique techniques, artworks, and personalities that made them into legends. Featuring a foreword by Andrew Graham-Dixon, Artists: Their Lives and Works is the ideal gift for art lovers old and young, and a uniquely fascinating look at the lives of these creators."
    Content: "Presents brief profiles of over eighty major artists throughout history, providing the historical context in which each artist worked, their influences, and legacies."
    Note: INDEX NOTE: includes indexes. , Foreword -- Before 1500 : Giotto ; Jan van Eyck ; Donatello ; Masaccio ; Piero della Francesca ; Giovanni Bellini ; Sandro Botticelli ; Hieronymus Bosch -- 16th Century : Leonardo da Vinci ; Wen Zhengming ; Albrecht Durer ; Michelangelo ; Titian ; Raphael ; Hans Holbein ; Pieter Bruegel the Elder ; El Greco -- 17th Century : Caravaggio ; Peter Paul Rubens ; Artemisia Gentileschi ; Nicolas Poussin ; Gianlorenzo Bernini ; Anthony van Dyck ; Diego Velazquez ; Kano Tan'yu ; Rembrandt ; Jan Vermeer ; Wang Hui -- 18th Century : Jeong Seon ; Jean-Antoine Watteau ; Giambattista Tiepolo ; Canaletto ; William Hogarth ; Jean-Simeon Chardin ; Ito Jakuchu ; Thomas Gainsborough ; Jean-Honore Fragonard ; John Singleton Copley ; Franciso de Goya ; Jacques-Louis David ; Elisabeth Vigee-Lebrun ; Antonio Canova -- 19th Century : Katsushika Hokusai ; Caspar David Friedrich ; J M W Turner ; John Constable ; Eugene Delacroix ; Gustave Courbet ; Dante Gabriel Rossetti ; Edouard Manet ; James McNeill Whistler ; Edgar Degas ; Paul Cezanne ; Auguste Rodin ; Claude Monet ; Henri Rousseau ; Ilya Repin ; Paul Gauguin ; Vincent van Gogh -- Early 20th Century : Gustav Klimt ; Edvard Munch ; Wassily Kandinsky ; Henri Matisse ; Piet Mondrian ; Constantin Brancusi ; Paul Klee ; Pablo Picasso ; Edward Hopper ; Amedeo Modigliani ; Marc Chagall ; Georgia O'Keeffe ; Rene Magritte ; Henry Moore -- 1945 to present : Alberto Giacometti ; Mark Rothko ; Salvador Dali ; Frida Kahlo ; Francis Bacon ; Jackson Pollock ; Bernard Buffet ; Andy Warhol ; Anish Kapoor ; Takashi Murakami -- Index of artworks -- General index -- Acknowledgments
    Language: English
    Keywords: Biographies ; Encyclopaedias
    Library Location Call Number Volume/Issue/Year Availability
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  • 2
    Image
    Image
    London, UK : Laurence King
    UID:
    kobvindex_INT0003795
    Format: 224 pages , richly illustrated (some colour), plans , 29 x 25 cm
    Edition: Reprint
    ISBN: 9781780676555 , 9781856696418 , 1780676557 , 1856696413
    Content: "Architectural detailing is what makes a design unique, and an architect outstanding. Detail in Contemporary Timber Architecture provides analysis of both the technical and the aesthetic importance of details in modern timber architecture. Featuring the work of renowned architects from around the world, this book presents 50 of the most recently completed and influential timber designs for both residential and commercial architecture. Each project is presented with color photographs, site plans and sections and elevations, as well as numerous construction details. There is also a descriptive text, detailed captions and in-depth information for each project, including the location, client, architectural project team, main consultants and contractors. The projects are presented in clear and concise layouts over four pages. All of the drawings are styled consistently and presented at standard architectural scales to allow for easy comparison. There is also a CD-ROM which contains all the drawings as printed in the book, in both EPS and DWG (generic CAD) formats. In addition the book features an index of architects that includes the name, address and all contact details for each architect included. Detail in Contemporary Timber Architecture is an excellent reference work for practising architects as well as architecture and design students."
    Note: EDITORIAL NOTE: hardback edition published 2010, ©2009; paperback edition published 2015, reprinted 2019 , INDEX NOTE: includes index. , Introduction -- CULTURAL AND EDUCATIONAL BUILDINGS : Grand Teton Discovery and Visitor Center, USA / Bohlin Cywinski Jackson ; Battle Visitor Center, UK / Dannatt, Johnson Architects ; Chancellery and Business School, Edith Cowan University, Australia / Francis-Jones Morehen Thorp ; Médiathèque René Goscinny, France / FORMA 6 ; Culloden Battlefield Visitor Centre, UK / Gareth Hoskins Architects ; Cultural Sports and Congress Centre, France / Hérault Arnod Architectes ; Crawley Down Primary School, UK / Hunters ; Svalbard Science Centre, Norway / Jarmund/Vigsnæs AS Architects ; Kärsämäki Church, Finland / Lassila Hirvilammi Architects ; Provincetown Art Association and Museum (PAAM), USA / Machado and Silvetti Associates ; BEATFUSE!, USA / OBRA Architects ; Mitchell Park Camera Obscura, USA / SHoP Architects -- HOUSES : Salt House, UK / Alison Brooks Architects ; Lago Vista Lake House, USA / Bercy Chen Studio ; Beach House, Turks and Caicos Islands / Seth Stein Architects ; Cedar House, UK / Hudson Architects ; Future House, Australia / Innovarchi ; Cape Schanck House, Australia / Jackson Clements Burrows ; Brookes Street House, Australia / James Russell Architect ; Holly Barn, UK / Knox Bhavan Architects ; Lake Tahoe residence, USA / Lake Flato Architects ; Cow stables, Switzerland / Localarchitecture ; Judenburg West housing, Austria / MACK Architects ; Shopping Roof apartments, Slovenia / Ofis Arhitekti and Jelka Šolmajer ; Light-catcher, The Netherlands / Rooijakkers + Tomesen Architecten ; Maison Goulet, Canada / Saia Barbarese Topouzanov Architectes ; Lakeside House, Turkey / Boran Ekinci Architects ; Pencalenick House, UK / Seth Stein Architects ; Bangalay House, Australia / Stutchbury and Pape ; Sunset Cabin, Canada / Taylor Smith Architects -- LEISURE BUILDINGS : WWT Welney Visitor Centre and Footbridge, UK / Allies and Morrison ; Brufe Restaurant, Portugal / António Portugal and Manuel Reis, Architects ; Anglesey Abbey Visitor Centre, UK / Cowper Griffith Architects ; Prairie Ridge Ecostation for Wildlife and Learning, USA / Frank Harmon Architects ; The Savill Building, UK / Glenn Howells Architects ; Norwich Cathedral Refectory, UK / Hopkins Architects ; Onsen Hotel, Japan / Kengo Kuma ; Avenham Park Pavilion, UK / McChesney Architects ; Aurland Lookout, Norway / Saunders Wilhelmsen -- PUBLIC BUILDINGS AND OFFICES : British Council, Nigeria / Allies and Morrison ; Ballard Library and Neighborhood Service Center, USA / Bohlin Cywinski Jackson ; CH2, Melbourne City Council House, Australia / City of Melbourne, DesignInc ; Hotel Remota en Patagonia, Chile / Germán del Sol Architects ; Centennial Park Amenities, Australia / Lahz Nimmo Architects ; Hugo Boss Industries Building, Switzerland / Matteo Thun and Partners ; Castleford Bridge, UK / McDowell + Benedetti ; Santa Caterina Market, Spain / Miralles Tagliabue EMBT ; St. Henry's Ecumenical Art Chapel, Finland / Sanaksenaho Architects ; Federal Environmental Agency, Germany / Sauerbruch Hutton ; United States Census Bureau, USA / Skidmore, Owings and Merrill -- Directory of details -- Directory of architects -- Index and further information
    Language: English
    Keywords: Case studies
    Library Location Call Number Volume/Issue/Year Availability
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  • 3
    UID:
    kobvindex_INT0000716
    Format: 157 pages, 100 plates : , richly illustrated (chiefly colour) ; , 34 cm.
    Edition: Reprint.
    ISBN: 9781850070726 (hbk.) , 1850070725 (hbk.)
    Content: MACHINE-GENERATED SUMMARY NOTE: "Through his work at the Great Exhibition, Jones developed a close working relationship with the civil servant Henry Cole (1808-1882) who went on to become the first director of the South Kensington Museum (later to become the V&A.) Through his contact with Cole, Jones was able to present his theories on decoration, ornament and polychromy via a series of lectures at the Society of Arts and at the Government School of Design, whose headmaster was the artist Richard Burchett, and which was administered by the newly formed Department of Practical Art at Marlborough House. Jones also advised on the formation of the teaching collections at Marlborough House (much of it acquired from exhibits at the Great Exhibition) which were collated together as the Museum of Ornamental Art, and which later became the foundation collections for the South Kensington Museum. Both Jones and Cole were concerned that these collections would encourage students to simply copy examples of ornament, rather than be inspired to examine the underlying decorative principles behind the objects. Furthermore, the location of the collections in London made it difficult for students at the provincial Schools of Design to gain access to them. These two factors would undoubtedly have been significant catalysts in motivating Jones to publish what is possibly his longest-lasting legacy: his seminal design sourcebook, The Grammar of Ornament, published in 1856. Through his articles and lectures, Jones had been formulating what he considered to be key principles for the decorative arts, and indeed these principles provided the new educational framework for the Government School of Design at Marlborough House. Jones expanded his propositions to create 37 "general principles in the arrangement of form and colour in architecture and the decorative arts" which became the preface to the 20 chapters of The Grammar of Ornament. The first 19 chapters of the Grammar present key examples of ornament from a number of sources which were diverse both historically and geographically - examining the Middle East in the chapters on Arabian, Turkish, Moresque (Alhambra) and Persian ornament. The final chapter, titled 'Leaves and Flowers from Nature' acknowledges the underlying principle that dictates the design of ornament around the world, which is the form found in nature: "in the best periods of art, all ornament was based upon an observation of the principles which regulate the arrangement of form in nature" and that "true art consists of idealising, and not copying, the forms of nature". Christopher Dresser, Jones's best known protégé, contributed one of the plates in this final chapter, and he was concurrently presenting theories on natural-form ornament in his famous botanical lectures at the Government School of Design in the mid-1850s. This last chapter raises some critics about the inability to produce new ornamental design since repetition is a common factor among nature, and Jones describes this as "going back to nature like the ancients did" but his own response to this issue evolves around the fact that nature has a great variety of line and form, and is based in geometry which gives an enormous amount of freedom to the designer to follow and idealize the form of nature as a basic element while creating something that society has never seen before. Jones gathered together all these samples of ornament as 'best' examples of decoration in an attempt to encourage designers to follow his lead in examining the underlying principles contained within the broad history of ornament and polychromy. The Grammar was influential in design schools in the latter half of the nineteenth century, and is still in print today."
    Content: MACHINE-GENERATED NOTE ABOUT AUTHOR(S)/EDITOR(S): "Owen Jones (15 February 1809 - 19 April 1874) was an English-born Welsh architect. A versatile architect and designer, he was also one of the most influential design theorists of the nineteenth century.[1] He helped pioneer modern colour theory, and his theories on flat patterning and ornament still resonate with contemporary designers today. He rose to prominence with his studies of Islamic decoration at the Alhambra, and the associated publication of his drawings, which pioneered new standards in chromolithography. Jones was a pivotal figure in the formation of the South Kensington Museum (later to become the V&A) through his close association with Henry Cole, the museum's first director, and another key figure in 19th century design reform. Jones was also responsible for the interior decoration and layout of exhibits for the Great Exhibition building of 1851, and for its later incarnation at Sydenham. Jones advised on the foundation collections for the South Kensington museum, and formulated decorative arts principles which became teaching frameworks for the Government School of Design, then at Marlborough House. These design propositions also formed the basis for his seminal publication, The Grammar of Ornament, the global and historical design sourcebook for which Jones is perhaps best known today. Jones believed in the search for a modern style unique to the nineteenth century, radically different from the prevailing aesthetics of Neo-Classicism and the Gothic Revival.[4] He looked towards the Islamic world for much of this inspiration, using his studies of Islamic decoration at the Alhambra to develop theories on flat patterning, geometry and abstraction in ornament. [...] **Decorative design** Jones was able to disseminate his theories on pattern and ornament through his work for several of the key manufacturers of the period, thus facilitating public consumption of his decorative visions in a number of diverse contexts. During the 1840s, having been inspired by the tilework at the Alhambra, Jones became known for his designs for mosaics and tessellated pavements, working for firms such as Maw & Co., Blashfield and Minton. He designed wallpapers for several firms from the 1840s until the 1870s including Townsend and Parker, Trumble & Sons and Jeffrey & Co. Jones was also prolific in the field of textiles - designing silks for Warner, Sillett & Ramm and carpets for Brinton and James Templeton & Co. Jones also immersed himself in a number of decorative schemes for domestic interiors, most notably working in collaboration with the London firm Jackson & Graham to produce furniture and other fittings. **Architectural projects and other commissions** Jones was well known for his work as an architect. Many of his built projects have been demolished or destroyed, including the Crystal Palace at Sydenham. His most important building was St James's Hall between Piccadilly and Regent Street; for almost fifty years it was London's principal concert hall. He was also responsible for two grand shopping emporiums: the Crystal Palace Bazaar and a showroom for Osler's, the glassware manufacturer, both in the West End. These three buildings all opened within a few years of each other, between 1858 and 1860, but had all been demolished by 1926. Their sumptuous polychromed interiors of cast iron, plaster and stained glass were monuments to leisure and consumption. One of the earliest examples of Jones's decoration as applied to architecture (and one of the few examples to exist today, albeit restored) was his work on Christ Church, Streatham, built in 1841 by James Wild (1814-1892), who became Jones's brother-in-law. Jones was responsible for the interior decoration, but would most probably have also contributed to the design of the exterior which exhibits brick polychromy and architectural details with Byzantine and Islamic influences. During the early 1860s, Jones was commissioned to design the South Kensington Museum's Indian Court and Chinese & Japanese Court, collectively known as the Oriental Courts. The V&A also holds design drawings by Jones for a speculative 'Alhambra' Court, which presumably would have housed exhibits of Islamic art - but this scheme was rejected in favour of his designs for the Chinese & Japanese Court. By the early twentieth century, the Oriental Courts were closed, but 1980s conservation work showed that much of Jones's decoration survives beneath the modern paintwork. Also in the 1860s, Jones designed luxurious interiors for wealthy clients, in collaboration with firms such as Jackson & Graham (for furniture) and Jeffrey & Co. (for wallpapers.) For example, for the art collector Alfred Morrison, Jones designed the interiors for his country house at Fonthill (1863) and his London town house at 16 Carlton House Terrace (1867). He designed interiors for the palace of the Viceroy of Egypt, Ismail Pasha, in Cairo (1864), both using Arab and Moorish design principles."
    Note: PREVIOUS EDITIONS NOTE: original edition published 1856 by Day & Son, London ; this edition first published 1986. -- Title page verso.
    Language: English
    Keywords: Handbooks and manuals
    Library Location Call Number Volume/Issue/Year Availability
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