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Most popular at the top

  • Painting Beautiful Skin Tones with Color & Lightby Chris Saper

    F+W Media 2011; US$ 27.99

    You can paint realistic skin tones that glow with life! Learning how to capture such quality has never been easier. Inside you'll find guidelines for rendering accurate skin tones in a variety of media, including watercolor, oil and pastel. You'll begin with a review of the five essential painting elements (drawing, value, color, composition and edges), then learn how light and color influence the appearance of skin tones. Artist Chris Saper provides the advice and examples that make every lesson and technique easy to understand--immediately improving the quality of your work. You'll discover how to: Paint the four major skin color groups (Caucasian, African American, Asian and Hispanic) Refine these colors into dozens of possible... more...

  • Painting Treesby Naomi Myles

    Boson Books 1999; US$ 7.50

    With quiet surety, Naomi Myles cultivates a contemplative wordscape allowing that ? . . . some roots be hidden and some exposed.? And in this crafted world we are asked to think of windows framing the past, some inhabitants in sharp focus, others, ?lights that flicker and go out.? ?Julie Suk Naomi Myles creates on aura of possibility in Painting Trees . Reading her poems is like taking a familiar road to sources where music, dance, words-art-really matter. ? Shelby Stephenson Boson Books also offers Painting Trees in print. For an author bio and photo, reviews and a reading sample, visit bosonbooks.com. more...

  • Leonardo da Vinciby Sigmund Freud

    Routledge 1999; US$ 275.00

    A reconstruction of Leonardo's emotional life from his earliest years, it represents Freud's first sustained venture into biography from a psychoanalytic perspective, and also his effort to trace one route that homosexual development can take. more...

  • Norman Rockwellby Laura Claridge

    Random House Publishing Group 2001; US$ 13.99

    Norman Rockwell’s tremendously successful, prolific career as a painter and illustrator has rendered him a twentieth-century American icon. However, the very popularity and accessibility of his idealized, nostalgic depictions of middleclass life have caused him to be considered not a serious artist but a “mere illustrator”–a disparagement only reinforced by the hundreds of memorable covers he drew for The Sunday Evening Post. Symptomatic of critics’ neglect is the fact that Rockwell has never before been the subject of a serious critical biography. Based on private family archives and interviews and publishes to coincide with a major two-year travelling retrospective of his work, this book reveals for the first... more...

  • Colorby Rolf G. Kuehni

    John Wiley & Sons, Inc. 2004; US$ 137.00

    Provides a solid foundation to the fundamentals of color science, this new edition contains thorough explanations of key technical concepts concerning light, human vision, and color perception phenomena, provides broad coverage of color order systems, examines color reproduction technologies and techniques, and offers a historical review of the development of color theory and art. * Provides a concise, non-mathematical introduction to color science and technology, in an easy-to-read, conversational style * Thoroughly revised from the first edition * Includes a glossary of important terms more...

  • Why Are Our Pictures Puzzles?by James Elkins

    Taylor & Francis 1999; US$ 35.95

    Elkins argues that the intricate meanings that are assigned to pictures are less a matter of insight than a symptom of our culture - a kind of excessive desire for understanding and a demand for clear solutions. more...

  • What Painting Isby James Elkins

    Taylor & Francis 2000; US$ 35.95

    At the root of this tremendously original work is Elkins' desire to bring the study of art back to the studio to understand the artist's relationship to his or her medium. more...

  • Orientalist Aestheticsby Roger Benjamin

    University of California Press 2003; US$ 15.95

    Lavishly illustrated with exotic images ranging from Renoir's forgotten Algerian oeuvre to the abstract vision of Matisse's Morocco and beyond, this book is the first history of Orientalist art during the period of high modernism. Roger Benjamin, drawing on a decade of research in untapped archives, introduces many unfamiliar paintings, posters, miniatures, and panoramas and discovers an art movement closely bound to French colonial expansion. more...

  • The Lost Paintingby Jonathan Harr

    Random House 2005; US$ 11.99

    An Italian village on a hilltop near the Adriatic coast, a decaying palazzo facing the sea, and in the basement, cobwebbed and dusty, lit by a single bulb, an archive unknown to scholars. Here, a young graduate student from Rome, Francesca Cappelletti, makes a discovery that inspires a search for a work of art of incalculable value, a painting lost for almost two centuries. The artist was Caravaggio, a master of the Italian Baroque. He was a genius, a revolutionary painter, and a man beset by personal demons. Four hundred years ago, he drank and brawled in the taverns and streets of Rome, moving from one rooming house to another, constantly in and out of jail, all the while painting works of transcendent emotional and visual power. He rose... more...

  • Qusayr ?Amraby Garth Fowden

    University of California Press 2004; US$ 65.00

    From the stony desolation of Jordan's desert, it is but a step through a doorway into the bath house of the Qusayr 'Amra hunting lodge. Inside, multicolored frescoes depict scenes from courtly life and the hunt, along with musicians, dancing girls, and naked bathing women. The traveler is transported to the luxurious and erotic world of a mid-eighth-century Muslim Arab prince. For scholars, though, Qusayr 'Amra, probably painted in the 730s or 740s, has proved a mirage, its concreteness dissolved by doubts about date, patron, and meaning. This is the first book-length contextualization of the mysterious monument through a compelling analysis of its iconography and of the literary sources for the Umayyad period. It illuminates not only the way... more...