[1972]
Book
Free Press,
Book
The complete printmaker : the art and technique of the relief print, the intaglio print, the collagraph, the lithograph, the screen print, the dimensional print, photographic prints, children's prints, collecting prints, print workshop
Ross, John, 1921-
Romano, Clare.
John Ross, Clare Romano.
1972
The complete printmaker : the art and technique of the relief print, the intaglio print, the collagraph, the lithograph, the screen print, the dimensional print, photographic prints, children's prints, collecting prints, print workshop
Teaching Co.,
DVD
How to look at and understand great art [videorecording].
The Great courses fine arts & music
Great courses (DVD). Music & fine arts.
The importance of first Impression -- Where am I? point of view and focal point -- Color: description, symbol and more -- Line: description and expression -- Space, shape, shade, and shadow -- Seeing the big picture: composition -- The illusion: getting the right perspective -- Art that moves us: time and motion -- Feeling with our eyes: texture and light -- Drawing: dry, liquid, and modern media -- Printmaking: relief and intaglio -- Modern printmaking: planographic -- Sculpture: salt cellars to monuments -- Development of painting: tempera and oils -- Modern painting: acrylics and assemblages -- Subject matters -- Signs: symbols, icons, and indexes in art -- Portraits: how artists see others -- Self-portraits: how artists see themselves -- Landscapes: art of the great outdoors -- Putting it all together -- Early Renaissance: humanism emergent -- Northern Renaissance: devil in the details -- High Renaissance: humanism perfected -- Mannerism and Baroque: distortion and drama -- Going Baroque: north versus south -- 18th century reality and decorative Rococo -- Revolutions: neoclassicism and romanticism -- Postimpressionism: form and content re-viewed -- Expressionism: empathy and emotion -- Cubism: an experiment in form -- Abstraction/Modernism: new visual languages -- Dada found objects/Surreal doodles and dreams -- Postmodernism: focus on the viewer -- Your next museum visit: do it yourself.
Hirsh, Sharon L.
Teaching Company.
2011
How to look at and understand great art [videorecording].
©1994.
Counter Cecil B. DeMille and American Culture demonstrates that the director, best remembered for his overblown biblical epics, was one of the mo
Book
9780520085565
9780520085572
Book
Cecil B. DeMille and American culture : the silent era
The Lasky Company and Highbrow Culture: Authorship versus Intertextuality -- The Consumption of Culture: Highbrow versus Lowbrow -- Texts and Intertexts: A Question of Authorship -- Geraldine Farrar: A Diva Comes to Hollywood -- Critical Discourses -- Film: The New Democratic Art -- Self-Theatricalization in Victorian Pictorial Dramaturgy: What's His Name -- Melodrama as a Middle-Class Sermon -- A Genteel Audience: Rewriting Domestic Melodrama -- Character versus Personality: What's His Name -- The Lower East Side as Spectacle: Class and Ethnicity in the Urban Landscape -- Representations of the City: Artificial or Romantic Realism -- Social Ills and Comic Relief: The Chimmie Fadden Series -- A Tour of the Lower East Side: Kindling -- Cinderella of the Slums: The Dream Girl -- The Screen as Display Window: Constructing the "New Woman" -- The "New Woman" as a Consumer -- Cinderella on the Lower East Side: The Golden Chance -- The "New Woman" versus the New Immigrant: The Cheat -- The Sentimental Heroine versus the "New Woman": The Heart of Nora Flynn -- The Historical Epic and Progressive Era Civic Pageantry: Joan the Woman -- A Usable Past: Civic Pageants as Historical Representation -- Representations and the Body Politic: Joan the Woman -- Discourse on Femininity: Joan of Are as a Symbol of Gender Conflict -- Critical Discourses: Gender and the Moral Lesson of History -- Set and Costume Design as Spectacle in a Consumer Culture: The Early Jazz Age Films -- DeMille's "Second Epoch."
Higashi, Sumiko, author.
Sumiko Higashi.
1994
Cecil B. DeMille and American culture : the silent era
[1956]
The collected poems of Edna St. Vincent Millay including the poet's last volume Mine the Harvest.
Book
Harper,
9780060129354
9780060129484
9780060908898
Book
Collected poems
Renascence -- Interim -- The suicide -- God's world -- Afternoon on a hill -- Sorrow -- Tavern -- Ashes of life -- The little ghost -- Kin to sorrow -- The first rose on my rose-tree -- Let the little birds sing -- All the dog-wood blossoms are underneath the tree -- The shroud -- The dream -- Indifference -- Witch-wife -- Blight -- When the year grows old -- Spring -- City trees -- The blue-flag in the bog -- Journey -- Eel-grass -- Elegy before death -- The bean-stalk- -- Weeds -- Passer mortuus est -- Pastoral -- Assault -- Travel -- Low-tide -- Song of a second April -- Rosemary -- The poet and his book -- Alms -- Inland -- To a poet that died young -- Wraith -- Ebb -- Elaine -- Burial -- Mariposa -- The little hill -- Doubt no more that Oberon -- Lament -- Exiled -- The death of autumn -- Ode to silence -- Epitaph -- Prayer to Persephone -- Chorus -- Dirge -- Elegy -- Wild swans -- First fig -- Second fig -- Recuerdo -- Thursday -- To the not impossible him -- Macdougal street -- The singing-woman for the wood's edge -- She is overheard singing -- The unexplorer -- Grown-up -- The penitent -- Daphne -- Portrait by a neighbour -- Midnight oil -- The merry maid -- To Kathleen -- To S.M. -- The philosopher -- My heart, being hungry -- Autumn chant -- Nuit Blanche -- Oh, little rose tree, bloom -- Beat me a crown of bluer metal -- Rain comes down -- The wood road -- Feast -- Souvenir -- Scrub -- The goose girl -- The dragonfly -- Departure -- The return from town -- A visit to the asylum -- The Spring and the Fall -- The curse -- Keen -- The betrothal -- Humoresque -- The pond -- The ballad of the harp-weaver -- Never may the fruit be plucked -- The concert -- Hyacinth -- To one who might have borne a message -- Siege -- The cairn -- Spring song -- Memory of Cape Cod -- Moriturus -- Song -- To the wife of a sick friend -- The bobolink -- The hawkweed -- To a friend estranged from me -- The road to Avrille -- For Pao-Chin, a boatman on the Yellow Sea -- Northern April -- There at dusk I found you -- Being young and green -- Mist in the valley -- The hardy garden -- The pigeons -- The buck in the snow -- The anguish -- Justice denied in Massachusetts -- Hangman's oak -- Wine from these grapes -- To those without pity -- Dawn -- To a young girl -- Evening on Lesbos -- Dirge without music -- Memory of Cassis -- Portrait -- Winter night -- The cameo -- Counting-out rhyme -- The plum gatherer -- West country song -- Pueblo pot -- When caesar fell -- Lethe -- On first having heard the skylark -- To a musician -- Come along in then, little girl -- Oh, burdock, and you other dock -- Everybody but just me -- I know a hundred ways to die -- Look, Edwin! do you see that boy -- All the grown-up people say -- Wonder where this horseshoe went -- The return -- October -- an etching -- Autumn daybreak -- The oak-leaves -- The fledgling -- The hedge of hemlocks -- Cap D' Antibes -- From a train window -- The fawn -- Valentine -- In the grave no flower -- Childhood is the kingdom where nobody dies -- The solid sprite who stands alone -- Spring n the garden -- Sonnet -- Aubade -- Sappho crosses the dark river into Hades -- Epitaph -- On thought in harness -- Desolation dreamed of -- The leaf and the tree -- On the wide heath -- Apostrophe to man -- My spirit, sore from marching -- Conscientious objector -- Above these cares -- If still your orchards bear -- Lines for a grave-stone -- How naked, how without a wall -- The ballad of Chaldon Down -- The princess recalls her one adventure -- Short story -- Pretty love, I must outlive you -- English sparrows -- Impression: fog off the coast of Dorset -- The rabbit -- Song for young lovers in a city -- To a Calvinist in Bali -- Thanksgiving dinner -- The snow storm -- Huntsman, what quarry? -- That chill is in the air -- Branch by branch -- Distressed mind, forbear -- Not dead of wounds, not borne -- Poor passionate thing -- Rendezvous -- The fitting -- What savage blossom -- Menses -- The plaid dress -- "Fontaine, je ne bourai pas de ton eau!" -- Intention to escape from him -- To a young poet -- Modern declaration -- The road to the past -- The true encounter -- Not even my pride will suffer much -- Heart, do not bruise the breast -- Rolled in the trough of thick desire -- And do you think that love itself -- I had not thought so tame a thing -- Leap now into this quiet grave -- Now from a stout and more imperious day -- The time of year ennobles you -- Song for a lute -- For you there is no song -- Sonnet in answer to a question -- Nobody now throughout the pleasant day -- Gone over to the enemy now -- Over the hollow land -- Inert perfection -- Say that we saw Spain die -- Underground system -- Two voices -- Mortal flesh, is not your place in the ground? -- No earthly enterprise -- Lines written in recapitulation -- This dusky faith -- Truce for a moment -- To the maid of Orleans -- Memory of England -- The pear tree -- Druid's chant -- Song of the nations -- Baccalaureate hymn -- Invocation to the Muses -- To S.V.B. -- If, in the foggy Aleutians -- Poem and prayer for an invading army -- Christmas canticle -- We have gone too far -- Deep in the muck of unregarded doom -- The animal ball -- Through the green forest -- As sharp as in my childhood -- By goodness and by evil so surrounded -- At least, my dear -- Small hands, relinquish all -- Ragged island -- To whom the house of Montagu was neighbour -- This is mine, and I can hold it -- Of what importance, o my lovely girls, my dancers -- Few come this way -- The strawberry shrub -- When it is over -- The courage that my mother had -- Wild-cat, gnat and I -- This should be simple; if one's power were great -- Song -- New England spring, 1942 -- Her in a rocky cup -- How innocent we lie -- Armenoville -- Put it down! I say -- I still can see -- There were herbs strown -- Heavily on the faithful bulk of Kurvenal -- Dream of Saba -- Who hurt you so -- When the tree-sparrows with no sound -- Amorphous is the mind -- For warmth alone, for shelter only -- The agnostic -- The apple-trees bud, but I do not -- Black hair you'd day she had -- Cave canem -- An ancient gesture -- Jesus to His disciples -- Establishment is shocked -- Some things are dark -- If it should rain -- The Parsi woman -- Journal -- The sea at sunset can reflect -- I, in disgust with the living -- How did I bear it -- Men working -- Steepletop -- Even you, sweet Basil -- Nothing could stand all this rain -- Borage, forage for bees -- The gardener in haying time -- Sky-coloured bird -- To a snake -- I woke in the night and heard the wind -- Look how the bittersweet -- Truck-garden market-day -- Intense and terrible, I think, must be the loneliness -- Sometimes, oh, often, indeed -- Not for a nation -- Thou art not lovelier than lilacs, no -- Time does not bring relief, you all have lied -- Mindful of you the sodden earth in spring -- Not in this chamber only at my birth -- If I should learn, in some quite casual way -- This door you might not open, and you did -- I do but ask that you be always fair -- Love, though for this you riddle me with darts -- I think I should have loved you presently -- Oh, think not I am faithful to a vow -- I shall forget you presently, my dear -- We talk of taxes, and I call you friend -- Into the golden vessel of great song -- Not with libations, but with shouts and laughter -- Only until this cigarette is ended -- Once more into my arid days like dew -- No rose that in a garden ever grew -- When I too long have looked upon your face -- And you as well must die, beloved dust -- Let you not say of me when I am old -- Oh, my beloved have you thought of this -- As to some lovely temple -- Cherish you then -- When you -- That love at length -- Love is not blind -- I know I am but summer -- I pray you if you love me -- Pity me not -- Sometimes when I am wearied suddenly -- Oh, oh, you will be sorry for that word -- Here is a wound that never will heal -- I shall go back again to the bleak shore -- Say what you will -- What's this of death -- I see so clearly now my similar years -- Your face is like a chamber -- The light combes back with Columbine -- Lord Archer, Death, whom sent you in your stead -- Loving you less than life -- I, being born a woman and distressed -- What lips my lips have kissed -- Still will I harvest beauty where it grows -- How healthily after feet upon the floor -- Euclid alone has looked on beauty bare -- Sonnets from an ungrafted tree.
Life ... -- Grow not too high -- Not that it matters -- Country of hunchbacks -- Upon this marble bust that is not I -- For this your mother sweated in the cold -- Sweet sounds -- What thing is this that -- The beast that rends me in the sight of all -- No lack of counsel from the shrewd and wise -- Nay, learned doctor, these fine leeches fresh -- Of all that ever in extreme disease -- Since I cannot persuade you from this mood -- Nigh is my sister -- Yet in an hour to come -- When you are dead -- Strange thing that I -- Not in a silver casket cool with pearls -- Olympian gods -- I said -- Epitaph for the race of man -- Those hours when happy hours were my estate -- Not, to me, less lavish -- Tranquility at length -- And is indeed truth beauty -- to hold secure the province of pure art -- And if I die -- It is the fashion now to wave aside -- Admetus -- What chores these churls do put upon the great -- I will put chaos into fourteen lines -- Come home, victorious wounded -- Read history so learn your place in time -- Read history thus learn how small a space -- My words that once were virtuous and expressed -- Now sits the autumn cricket in the grass -- And must I then -- If I die solvent -- Grief that is grief and properly so hight -- Felicity of grief -- What rider spurs him from the darkening east.
Millay, Edna St. Vincent, 1892-1950.
Edited by Norma Millay.
1956
Collected poems
Museum of Modern Art ; Distributed by New York Graphic Society Books/Little, Brown,
9780870705939
9780870705991
Book
Frank Stella, 1970-1987
Rubin, William Stanley.
Stella, Frank.
Museum of Modern Art (New York, N.Y.)
William Rubin.
1987
Frank Stella, 1970-1987
Crown Publishers,
9780517505779
Book
Collage and assemblage : trends and techniques
Meilach, Dona Z.
Ten Hoor, Elvie, author.
by Dona Z. Meilach and Elvie Ten Hoor.
1973
Collage and assemblage : trends and techniques
University of California Press,
9780520085183
Book
Myth, meaning, and memory on Roman sarcophagi
Koortbojian, Michael.
Michael Koortbojian.
1995
Myth, meaning, and memory on Roman sarcophagi
Ashgate,
9781409405016
9781409405023
9781409472650
Book
Drought and the human story : braving the bull of Heaven
Heathcote, R. L.
by R.L. Heathcote.
2013
Drought and the human story : braving the bull of Heaven
G. Braziller,
9780807608531
Book
Romanesque art
Selected papers ;
Works. Selections. 1977. Braziller ;
Schapiro, Meyer, 1904-1996.
Meyer Schapiro.
1977
Romanesque art
c2004.
You will learn the art and techniques of creating and producing your very own block prints. This clear and informative program addresses the vari
DVD
JLC Title 245h
[videorecording].
On Air Video Inc.,
DVD
The art of block printing [videorecording].
Block printing
On Air Video Inc. presents the art of block printing
On Air Video, Inc.
2004
The art of block printing [videorecording].
2021
Each of the works illustrated has been selected to reflect the broad spectrum of techniques and purposes. The featured artworks are in the Tate's
Book
9781849767637
Book
The art of print : three hundred years of printmaking
Jacklin, Elizabeth, author.
Elizabeth Jacklin.
2021
The art of print : three hundred years of printmaking
University of Delaware Press ; Associated University Presses,
9780874132793
Book
The sculpture and sculptors of Yazılıkaya
Alexander, Robert L., 1920-1998.
Robert L. Alexander.
1986
The sculpture and sculptors of Yazılıkaya