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Art and Photography - Architecture Historic Preservation books

Posted in Art and Photography (Tuesday, January 6, 2009)

Written by David Naylor and Joan Dillon. By Schiffer Publishing. The regular list price is $39.95. Sells new for $26.00. There are some available for $10.00.
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2 comments about American Theaters: Performance Halls of the Nineteenth Century.

  1. American theatres are marvels of design and content and here to celebrate their history is AMERICAN THEATRES, a top pick for any serious college-level holding strong in film and stage history. The book profiles some forty of the finest theatres in operation around the country, covering a range of structures and styles and blending original photos by David Naylor - many published here for the first time - to contrast histories of different venues, from playhouses and opera houses to concert halls. The state-by-state listing of over 200 surviving 19th century theatres assures any serious buff will easily locate venues.


  2. Well-written. Over 300 photos of historic American theaters located in all but six US states (with 18 pages in color). Buildings featured include town hall theaters, Western boom-town opera houses, library theaters, Chautauqua halls, and Grand Opera Houses. Readers will be surprised by the variety and beauty of many theaters in remote areas.


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Posted in Art and Photography (Tuesday, January 6, 2009)

Written by W. Keene Ferguson. By Tyler Pub. Co. There are some available for $10.50.
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No comments about Ferguson's guide to the roadside history of Texas.




Posted in Art and Photography (Tuesday, January 6, 2009)

Written by Malcolm C Drummond. By H. Bartholomew and Associates. There are some available for $260.49.
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No comments about Historic sites in Franklin County, Missouri.




Posted in Art and Photography (Tuesday, January 6, 2009)

Written by Ezra Nahmad. By Scala. There are some available for $20.00.
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No comments about The archeological center of Rome.




Posted in Art and Photography (Tuesday, January 6, 2009)

Written by London Planning Advisory Committee. By English Heritage. Sells new for $7.32. There are some available for $15.77.
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No comments about Conservation in London.




Posted in Art and Photography (Tuesday, January 6, 2009)

Written by Christopher Rowell and John Martin Robinson. By Trafalgar Square Publishing. There are some available for $47.03.
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No comments about Uppark Restored.




Posted in Art and Photography (Tuesday, January 6, 2009)

Written by Gail Lee Dubrow and Donna Graves and Karen Cheng. By University of Washington Press. The regular list price is $19.95. Sells new for $6.50. There are some available for $3.18.
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4 comments about Sento at Sixth and Main: Preserving Landmarks of Japanese American Heritage.

  1. Sento(bath house) is a place where Japanese people communicate with friends and neighbors, as well as enjoy in a hot bath. When the Issei Japanese emigrated overseas around 1900, they made Sentos near their new residences.
    This is a book that show us about prewar Japanese-American heritage (such as Sento, school, temple...) on the West Coast. And also, lots of interviews with (mostly) Nisei people are included. Very interesting...

    I've just had a chance to see this Sento in Panama Hotel, Seattle. I was totally lost for words. Old bath tubs, "TAKE OFF SHOES HERE" sign, store ads...everything there was just as they used to be in '30s. Today, it's rare to see such a thing even in Japan.
    If you visit to Seattle, please drop by Panama Hotel's cafe (at 6th and Main) and just take a look. They have lots of old pictures and furniture. You'll learn Japantown's history while enjoying nice coffee.


  2. I saw the a copy of this book in Seattle at the Panama Hotel (that the book is named after) but decided to buy it on Amazon for less. I didn't realize until I got it that it's not the same book, it's been reprinted. Not as nice as the original.


  3. Sento at Sixth and Main is beautifully written and executed. This book is not only historic and academic, but culturally elegant and articulate. Studies like Dubrow and Grave's are much needed in ethnic communities. I enjoyed learning about these different sites, as well as experiencing the artistic and honorable way they are presented.


  4. The following review written by Richard Engeman appeared in Arcade 20.3, a journal of architecture and design in the Pacific Northwest:

    No longer is history created solely from the written word. No longer is historic preservation justified solely by esthetics. We will be seeing a very much more layered look at our past, as new research combines evidence from unexamined data along with different ways of analyzing the information it holds. In Sento at Sixth and Main, Gail Dubrow and Donna Graves have created a striking work about Japanese American communities on the Pacific Coast from the 1890s into the 1990s. It provides a novel way of understanding the past by carefully observing the buildings of the physical present, and by imaginatively analyzing a wide variety of historical evidence.

    What Dubrow and Graves have tried to do is to recreate some aspects of the daily lives of residents of Japanese American communities, using the buildings and structures that remain and that represent archetypal activities of the communities. The ten chapters/structures might be characterized: industrial work/housing; farm; store; theater; bath; school; temple; clinic; urban district; entertainment hall. Each chapter details the story of a building or structure in the Seattle or Los Angeles area: its history, its significance, its place in community life. The books makes extensive use of oral history interviews, personal snapshots, archeological findings, and such paper ephemera as merchandise catalogs and newspaper clippings, as well as more traditional historical sources.

    This is a rich and dense production that will cause you to look more closely at the everyday world, to wonder what it says and what it represents. A building may give sign of its significance away at first glance, as Emmanji Temple in Sebastopol seems to do. But you would not know by looking at it that it was originally built as a railway exhibit building for the Century of Progress at Chicago in 1934, intended as of a replica of a Buddhist temple of the Kamakura period (1185-1333). Many other structures betray little if anything that would associate them with an ethnic community. An example is the deserted and largely demolished milltown of Selleck, Washington, where the differences between the housing for Japanese American workers and that for white workers are not distinguishable in the absence of the residents, although they were readily apparent when the town was active.

    The book weaves text and illustrations into a convincing whole, where photographs are not merely illustrations but are a vital and integrated part of the argument and the story. Alas, a few of the most striking photographs do not directly portray what one thinks they do. The evocative cover image of a woman in a sento (bath) was taken in Japan, not Seattle, and quite recently. The timber workers whose image anchors the section on the town of Selleck, were photographed in Oregon, a hundred and fifty miles from Selleck. As historical evidence, the first photo fails to represent either the time or the location that its placement suggests. The second example misleads only in terms of place, and not significantly for documentary purposes, but its placement within the book suggests it was taken near Selleck. Caption notes at the back of the book tell most of the story, but fail to note that the cover photo was in fact shot in Japan.

    I hoped there would be a chapter about a garden, but there is not. I was thinking of the remarkable Kubota Gardens in Seattle, a vernacular construction that is the result of an intersection of esthetics and business. Interestingly, Fujitaro Kubota worked at the Pacific Coast Lumber Company mill in Selleck not long after his immigration to the United States.

    Small criticism for a book that is beautifully conceived and produced, and that makes such a pointed case for the value of structures in documenting the history of communities. It gives the cause of historic preservation good reason to examine the values of vernacular architecture, and for all of us to examine the values of community.

    _________________________________

    Richard H. Engeman is public historian at the Oregon Historical Society in Portland. He was at the University of Washington Libraries 1984-1999, where he was the archivist in charge of historical photographs and architectural plans and drawings.



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Posted in Art and Photography (Tuesday, January 6, 2009)

Written by Lisa Foster. By Donhead Publishing. Sells new for $114.98. There are some available for $129.80.
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No comments about Access to the Historic Environment.




Posted in Art and Photography (Tuesday, January 6, 2009)

Written by Richard W. Berman. By Lexington Books. The regular list price is $130.00. Sells new for $122.05. There are some available for $44.17.
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No comments about Assessing Urban Design: Historical Ambience on the Waterfront.




Posted in Art and Photography (Tuesday, January 6, 2009)

Written by Michele Palmer. By Schiffer Publishing. The regular list price is $19.95. Sells new for $14.95. There are some available for $13.87.
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1 comments about Gingerbread Gems of Willimantic, Connecticut.

  1. This was a nice book, nicely done. The photographs and descriptions gave a thoughtful picture of a town justifiably proud of its history.


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Last updated: Tue Jan 6 22:56:47 EST 2009