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While social distancing measures have led to the cancellation of many meetings this spring, it doesn't mean you have to skip the book exhibit! The titles below are available for immediate download as e-books. Browse our full list of art history-related titles here and take 40% off all print-on-demand books using coupon code NR18 when checking out. Take care and take the time to enjoy a new book! |
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Notre Dame CathedralNine Centuries of HistoryDany Sandron and Andrew Tallon, Translated by Andrew Tallon and Lindsay Cook Since its construction, Notre Dame Cathedral has played a central role in French cultural identity. In the wake of the tragic fire of 2019, questions of how to restore the fabric of this quintessential French monument are once more at the forefront. This all-too-prescient book, first published in French in 2013, takes a central place in the conversation. | | | |
Simon Hantaï and the Reserves of PaintingMolly Warnock “Warnock’s monograph makes a signature contribution to the study of Hantaï’s body of work and to the wider history of modernism. She explicates the fundamental theoretical and practical concerns of an understudied artist whose work, while important, is not well known to a broad audience. Without a doubt, her scholarship provides the most sophisticated art-historical analysis of Hantaï’s thought and practice to date.” —Michael Schreyach, author of Pollock’s Modernism
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Contraband GuidesRace, Transatlantic Culture, and the Arts in the Civil War EraPaul H. D. Kaplan “Both a creative and a fastidious scholar, Paul Kaplan aims to shed fresh light on the dialogue concerning race, nationalism, and representation. In this well-argued volume, he deftly weaves together travel writing by Americans abroad becoming aware of Africans in Europe; racial representations by the talented mixed-race Louisiana sculptor Eugène Warburg and the German American painter Emanuel Leutze; a dialogue on racial matters between two major intellectuals, Charles Norton and John Ruskin; and the relevance of the Old European Masters whose racial representations made an impact on African Americans.” —Patricia Hills, author of Painting Harlem Modern: The Art of Jacob Lawrence
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The Female SecessionArt and the Decorative at the Viennese Women’s AcademyMegan Brandow-Faller “Impeccably researched, The Female Secession is an invaluable contribution to scholarship on early twentieth-century Austrian art and to feminist art history. Brandow-Faller persuasively argues that the self-consciously feminine art produced by Women’s Academy artists should be understood as part of a feminist lineage that leads through the artwork of 1970s feminist artists such as Judy Chicago and Miriam Schapiro and on to that of craftivists of the twenty-first century.” —Bibiana Obler, author of Intimate Collaborations: Kandinsky and Münter, Arp and Taeuber
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Medieval Art in MotionThe Inventory and Gift Giving of Queen Clémence de HongrieMariah Proctor-Tiffany “Proctor-Tiffany’s pathbreaking study of the art of Clémence de Hongrie, queen of France (1293–1328), argues convincingly that queens were crucial bearers of culture in medieval Europe. Proctor-Tiffany’s expertise as an art historian is evident on every page. Especially innovative is her use of urban cartography and geospatial mapping to track the sources of raw materials and their movement to the artists who created objects for personal delight, bodily adornment, spiritual devotion, or public display.” —Theresa Earenfight, author of Queenship in Medieval Europe
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Study in Black and WhitePhotography, Race, HumorTanya Sheehan “Working at the intersection of race, humor, and photography studies, this important new book supplies a new lens through which to view all of these disciplines. Tanya Sheehan has taken the field of racialized humor in an original direction through a rigorous and nuanced examination of the impact of photography upon visual humor from the nineteenth century to the present. Particularly fascinating is Sheehan’s consideration of camera comedy and the minstrel stage, both in America and abroad. Eminently readable, Study in Black and White is both appealing and illuminating.” —Henry Louis Gates Jr., Alphonse Fletcher University Professor, Harvard University
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