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  • - 1969-2019
    av Suzanne Fagence Cooper
    279

    In his day, John Ruskin was revered as an art critic - champion of Turner and the Pre-Raphaelites - as well as an artist, educator and campaigner. However, by the mid-20th century, his message was relegated to the footnotes of debate. The Ruskin Revival: 1969-2019 celebrates the world's welcome re-engagement with his radical worldview.

  • av Henry Crabb Robinson
    155

    William Blake (1757-1827), hailed as 'the glorious luminary' by William Rossetti, is one of the great mystics in the history of Western art. This volume brings together some of the most illuminating writings by people who knew Blake, and brings this astonishing visionary to life

  • av Richard Suart
    279

    - Richard Suart's celebration of English National Opera's iconic Jonathan Miller production of The Mikado, which has run worldwide for over 35 years, with excellent color photography"The audience should feel as they come out of this show that they have over-eaten an enormous cream meringue". Jonathan Miller's ambition was completely successful, and his Mikado has been revived umpteen times in London and played in LA, Houston, New York and Venice. It brought together some of the finest stage talents of its time, and revolutionized Gilbert and Sullivan. Richard Suart, iconic incarnation of KoKo, Lord High Executioner, celebrates this landmark production in all its variations over the years, with his unmistakeable wit and humor, and deep understanding of the stagecraft of opera and the history of G&S. Over 200 photographs take the reader on a unique journey into the heart of a theatrical masterpiece.

  • av William Hogarth
    159,-

    William Hogarth's pithy autobiography and writings on his own art - hitherto virtually unobtainable.

  • - How John Ruskin Shapes Our World
    av Andrew Hill
    279

    Who was John Ruskin? What did he achieve - and how?Where is he today? One possible answer: almost everywhere.

  • av Anna Gruezner Robins, Walter Sickert & George Moore
    148

    Two essays remembering Degas by the most acute observers of the avant-garde art of their time, Walter Sickert and George Moore. Introduced by Professor Anna Gruezner Robins, a leading expert on Degas and his British admirers

  • av Giorgio Vasari
    155

    For many people the greatest artist, and the quintessentialRenaissance man, Leonardo da Vinci wasa painter, architect, theatre designer, engineer, sculptor,anatomist, geometer, naturalist, poet and musician.

  • av Giorgio Vasari
    159,-

    The most exhilarating painter of the Renaissance and arguablyof the whole of western art, Tintoretto was known as Il Furiosobecause of the attack and energy of his style.

  • av Pietro Aretino, Giorgio Vasari, Sperone Speroni, m.fl.
    159,-

    Titian was recognised very early on as the leading painter of his generation in Venice. Starting in the studio of the aged Giovanni Bellini, Titian, with his contemporary Giorgione, almost immediately started to expand the range of what was possible in painting.

  • av Aidan Dodson
    259,-

    Aidan Dodson's British Royal Tombs covers all the burials of the kings, queens (and lords protector) of England, Scotland and the United Kingdom, from the occupant of the great Sutton Hoo ship burial, to George VI, last Emperor of India, including of course the long-lost Richard III.

  • av Philip Thicknesse
    148

    One of the best-loved painters in English history, ThomasGainsborough (1727-1788) was also one of the mostpersonally engaging. Bon vivant, wit, amateur and enthusiasticmusician, he charmed sitters and friends alike. His ebullient,if not always reliable, personality comes to life in these twomemoirs, written by two very different friends.

  • av Ferdinand Hiller
    255,-

    The autobiography that Rossini never got round to writing

  • av Pacheco Palomino & Francisco Pacheco
    159,-

    Presents a collection of two of the most important biographies on the artist Diego Velazquez. Diego Velazquez (1599-1660) is for many the greatest painter ever to have lived. His astonishing naturalism had an immediate and lasting impact on his contemporaries, inspiring both awe and fierce debate.

  • av Ovid
    145,99

    Ovid's matchless love poems in a glittering translation by the young Christopher Marlowe and illustrated by Rodin

  • - Writings on Manet by Emile Zola
    av Robert Lethbridge & Emile Zola
    148

    This volume brings together the groundbreaking criticism of Emile Zola, from his vigorous defence of the iconoclastic young painter to the memorial essay written after Manet's untimely death. A new introduction by Robert Lethbridge sets Zola's essays in the context of Manet's career and his relationship with the writer. 49 pages of illustrations

  • av Charles Douglas
    209

    What were Montmartre and Montparnasse really like in their hey-day roughtly between 1904, when the youthful Picasso had just arrived on the Hill of Martyrs, and 1920, when Amedeo Modigliani , justly called `the prince of Bohemians', died of consumption and dissipation in Montparnasse?

  • av Jim Dearden
    285

    Jim Dearden's latest book, A John Ruskin Collection, brings together a lifetime's worth of articles on the lives of John Ruskin and those around him

  • av Giorgio Vasari
    148

    Michelangelo Buonarrotti (1475-1564) is perhaps the greatest artist in the entire Western tradition. In painting, sculpture and architecture he created works that went beyond anything imagined before. This book draws a picture of Michelangelo - the man and the artist. It features 45 pages of colour illustrations covering his achievement, and more.

  • av Giorgio Vasari
    148

  • av Jo van Gogh-Bonger
    145

  • av Marzena Pogorzaly
    185

    Marzena Pogorzaly made two trips to Havana. There, she walked the streets of Havana Vieja and El Centro, the old districts, trying to capture the melancholy beauty and decay of the city, and its inhabitants.

  • - Vasari, Ridolfi and the d'Este correspondence
    av Giorgio Vasari
    149,-

    Scion of an artistic dynasty, Giovanni Bellini is arguablythe greatest Venetian painter of the early Renaissance. Hisastonishing naturalism revolutionised altarpiece painting andis still a source of wonder, as any visit to Frari in Venice willconfirm.

  • av Ronald T. Ridley
    319 - 345,-

    The most comprehensive anthology of writings by visitors to the eternal city ever compiled. Witty, profound and endlessly entertaining. Drawing on French, Italian, Spanish, English and American sources, many hitherto neglected, Ronald Ridley has compiled an endlessly vivid and thought-provoking collage-portrait of Rome.

  • av Ronald Ridley
    319,-

    The most comprehensive anthology of travelers' writings about Rome ever published, ranging from Dark Age pilgrimages to the luxuries of 19th-century tourism, and including travelers from every corner of Europe and from America. Magick City paints an unforgettable picture of the fascinations of the eternal city.

  • av Kevin Jackson
    276,99

    A general introduction to Ruskin, situating him in the social, economic and aesthetic world of Victorian Britain that he transformed, and the importance of his legacy.

  • - A Pilgrimage to the Holy Land with Reverend Richard Coles
    av Kevin Jackson
    149,-

    On Easter, 2014, Britain's best-loved vicar, the Rev. Richard Coles, led a pilgrimage to all the major historic sites of the Holy Land. All of the pilgrims in his care were Christians, except one: the writer Kevin Jackson. This one wrote a light-hearted diary of that pilgrimage, and a close-up portrait of Richard Coles both as priest and as man.

  • av Annabel Simms
    205 - 259,-

  • - Comedies, Histories and Tragedies of William Shakespeare
    av Abram Games
    135,99

    Joining this year's fourth-centenary celebrations, this flipbook is a delightful catalogue of Shakespeare's plays. It is also the only unpublished work by one of Britain's greatest graphic designers, Abram Games, and a little landmark in the history of design.

  • av Oliver Hoare
    519

  • av Robert Brownell
    147

    The oldest library in the world lies derelict and forgotten in an empty landscape. When all you know comes from books it's difficult to choose between truth and fiction. But being wrong might have terrifying consequences.

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