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Art and Photography - General Architecture books

Posted in Art and Photography (Saturday, August 30, 2008)

Written by Elizabeth Curie. By Victoria and Albert Museum. The regular list price is $27.50. Sells new for $21.84. There are some available for $24.47.
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1 comments about Inside the Renaissance House.

  1. Dr. Currie worked at the Victoria & Albert museum in London for several years in the Furniture, Textile and Fashion department. She now lives in Florence and has combined her experience and education to present this study of the 'lifestyle of the rich and famous' during the Italian Renaissance.

    The book is lavisly illustrated with photographs of artwork, furniture, tableware, and room fixtures of the time. It presents a view of how life in the period was lived. It is done in the form of first a description of the Renaissance home, then a room by room view.

    Along with a descrition of the room itself, there is also a description of life in that room at that time. For instance in the chapter entitled 'The Bedroom,' there is what might be called a sub-title: 'Marriages, Births and Everyday Life.'

    Dr. Currie has done an excellent job of pulling these pictures together.

    There are, of course, no bath rooms, and in spite of the decorations and elegance, I can't help but wonder what the place smelled like.


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Posted in Art and Photography (Saturday, August 30, 2008)

By Taschen. The regular list price is $9.99. Sells new for $5.19. There are some available for $1.20.
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No comments about China Style: Exteriors Interiors Details (Icons).




Posted in Art and Photography (Saturday, August 30, 2008)

Written by International Code Council. By Delmar Cengage Learning. The regular list price is $107.00. Sells new for $77.04. There are some available for $237.24.
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No comments about 2006 International Building Code: Code & Commentary, Volume 1 (International Building Code Commentary).




Posted in Art and Photography (Saturday, August 30, 2008)

Written by Patricia Bayer. By Thames & Hudson. The regular list price is $34.95. Sells new for $16.00. There are some available for $12.88.
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1 comments about Art Deco Architecture: Design, Decoration, and Detail from the Twenties and Thirties.

  1. Let me state off the bat; I love Art Deco architecture. The artistry and the masonry that went into these buildings is a feast for the eyes. This book is very thorough and the vintage black and white pictures ooze sepia, some these buildings I had never seen photographed. The text is informative without being too scholarly or too grossly indepth. This is one of the better books on Art Deco, but still the book on American Art Deco is the best, it has recent color images and is just a much prettier book, but for what this is, it succeeds very well.


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Posted in Art and Photography (Saturday, August 30, 2008)

Written by Steven Holl. By Princeton Architectural Press. The regular list price is $12.95. Sells new for $6.51. There are some available for $6.25.
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No comments about Pamphlet Architecture 13: Edge of a City (Pamphlet Architecture).




Posted in Art and Photography (Saturday, August 30, 2008)

Written by Michael J. Harner. By University of California Press. The regular list price is $21.95. Sells new for $6.00. There are some available for $2.05.
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4 comments about The Jivaro: People of the Sacred Waterfalls.

  1. Harner's Jivaro is a very interesting book. I cannot attest to the ethnographic veracity of the text as some other reviewers, but I can speak to what I thought about the book. This book is one of the most fascinating ethnographies I have read. It is very "sexy": violence, drugs, death, decapitation, shrunken heads...edgy stuff. What utterly fascinated me was the description of how this state of affairs came about. Harner claims that head-hunting raids didn't take place, or at least not with the frequency as reported in this book until the introduction of firearms by the Spanish. At this point rival tibes were better able to kill each other, and violence increased. I found it all very interesting, and would recommend it.


  2. This is a classic ethnography of the Shuar, the one that established the standard for all subsequent descriptions of the Shuar. I have done extensive field work with a Shuar related group and was impressed on how accurate Harner's account was, even though the group I worked with was separate in both time and space from the untsuri shuar. This is a must read for anyone interested in the ethnography of lowland South America.


  3. The title is good -- the Shuar (Jivaro) indeed have a special reverence for sacred waterfalls -- but the rest of the book captures little of the true flavor of Shuar culture and character. (I spent several months among the Shuar many years ago.) As an example, Nunkui is the spirit of Earth when referred to as a living being, but the author refers to Nunkui as "a female crop fairy." Even if one does not speak Shuar, the relationship of the word "Nunkui" to the word "Nunka" (land or territory) should be obvious. There is much superficial observation in this book but very little true insight.


  4. Michael Harner's "Jivaro" documents a society marked by excessive use of hallucinogenic stimulants. I read this book to fulfill a class assignment. It's going to take a whole lot of acid to get me to read it again.


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Posted in Art and Photography (Saturday, August 30, 2008)

Written by Robert Liddiard. By Windgather Press. The regular list price is $35.00. Sells new for $30.46. There are some available for $34.96.
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No comments about Castles in Context: Power, Symbolism and Landscape 1066-1500.




Posted in Art and Photography (Saturday, August 30, 2008)

Written by Leslie Linsley. By Monacelli. The regular list price is $45.00. Sells new for $27.28. There are some available for $22.92.
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3 comments about Key West: A Tropical Lifestyle.

  1. This book gives the true eclectic style of Key West. The photos are wonderful and give an accurate insight into the private homes and life style of this laid back, creative, elegant, charming community.....It gives one a look at the gracious stately old homes as well as the most impressive renovations of cottages in "old town". Book is filled with gorgeous full page photographs, beautifully, uniquely, Key West!


  2. I think Key West had an appeal that you don't find in other parts of the country. It's the southern most point in America and there is the same feeling that you get in other special towns in the US, such as New Orleans, and SanFrancisco. Each has something unique about it.

    This was a great book for capturing that feeling. It's also nice to see beyond the street view. I found the text interesting and very readable.

    I hope if you decided to buy this book you will enjoy it as well.


  3. It's hard to imagine how the natives, or the locals, live in places like Key West or New Orleans. These tropical outposts seem less mainstream than other parts of the USA; unique people put down roots in both of these sister cities. This lovely book gives a glimpse into homes of the poeple who live and work in Key West. It is just beautiful to see gracious living that is for real and not manufactured, but imagined and realized. Starting with the cover photo of the home of Michael Pelkey (and the ten pages of his home, and the ending photo of his kitchen countertop), you will be transported. The author writes with knowingness and sensitivity and respect for the inhabitants of, the history, and of present time Key West. This is a great inspiration book for your own lifestyle and decor, and a lovely arm chair vacation too. I would love the author Leslie Linsley, and the photographer Terry Pommett to come to New Orleans and do a sister book for us here (and bring Michael Pelkey along to lend his expert eye to the whole project).


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Posted in Art and Photography (Saturday, August 30, 2008)

Written by Judith Griffin and Penny Collins. By Fairchild Books & Visuals. The regular list price is $90.40. Sells new for $56.57. There are some available for $41.10.
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No comments about Wear Your Chair: When Fashion Meets Interior Design.




Posted in Art and Photography (Saturday, August 30, 2008)

Written by Ebba Koch. By Thames & Hudson. The regular list price is $75.00. Sells new for $38.99. There are some available for $35.24.
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3 comments about The Complete Taj Mahal.

  1. Having visited the Taj Mahal, I wanted to have an authoritative book on the history behind its construction and this book is not only an excellent souce, but also a very good photographic record of this amazing Wonder of the World!


  2. Having read a number of books about the Taj Mahal, including the recently published one by the Prestons, I would bet good money that if given a copy of Ebba Koch's book to preview, those truly interested in India's national treasure will buy THE COMPLETE TAJ MAHAL, even if they have to skip lattes or lunches to afford it, even if they have already done so to afford Okada/Joshi/Nou's Taj Mahal with its stunning photography.

    One reason, of course, is that TCTM is so complete. To others' overviews of the material covered, I would add only that Koch does not neglect the human element. For example, in eight introductory pages of text, Koch provides excellent background information about Shah Jahan, his wife and his predecessors; later, she details Jahan's passion for building. Koch also includes interesting information about the artisans, craftsmen and laborers who did the actual work as well as details about others associated with the Taj-related structures/gardens of Agra. Further humanizing the story of this garden city are colorful Mughal paintings of its nobility and rulers.

    Another aspect of TCTM that makes it a must-have are the many photographs of sites, structures and architectural ornamentation, photographs "The Hindu" declared "often brilliant" as well as "judiciously chosen." Just how apt these descriptions are is suggested by the following: There were only seven pages of O/J/Nou's photographic extravaganza of the Taj complex that I photocopied to tuck into Koch's book, and of them, five were additional close-ups of floral inlays and calligraphy. Adding to the appeal of TCTM is that the camera goes beyond the splendors of the Taj complex. Of special interest to those who have been in Agra, for instance, will be the realistic photographs of the Taj Mahal peeking above the "agglomeration of haphazard constructions" that have "almost obliterated" its bazaar and caravanserai. Shown, too, are its architectural precedents as well as artisan workshops and quarries. Though most of the photographs in this book are in color, even those in black and white are revealing.

    Also making TCTM next to impossible to resist are the "company drawings," most of which are in color as well. Forerunners of postcards, they were "made by local artists in the early days of the Raj" for European tourists, who bought them "to illustrate their journals." Works of art in themselves, often the drawings are so detailed that they could easily be photographs. But they do not serve as mere eye candy: many are of Taj-related structures that no longer exist or have been stripped of all that made them magnificent; some are juxtaposed with recent photographs to show the toll time has taken on the brilliance of color and intricacy of design. Evocative paintings and watercolors of the Taj Mahal by foreign artists are included as well.

    What may ultimately sell people on TCTM, however, is that it is a book they will actually enjoy reading much if not all of. Not only is Koch's narrative writing fluid and easy-to-digest. Even her descriptions of architecture will be relatively easy for laymen to understand, provided that they are willling to refer to the glossary of terms and look at the many visual aids, including Barraud's "precise and clear" line drawings, that accompany the text. So well done is this book, in fact, that as "The Hindu" noted, even "information which is more technical and not at face value so interesting to general readers will, in fact, be found by them to be equally absorbing." (All I would personally exclude from this are the two pages of precise measurements of the Taj complex.)

    To another reviewer's assertion that TCTM is a book that "should be in the library of anyone fascinated by the Taj Mahal, not just historians and architects," I add a thousand "Amen's." --B. Evans, 4/14/07


  3. A superlative volume showing in detail and with historic drawings, maps, and photos, as well modern illustrations and reconstructions the unsurpassed achievements of the Mughal in residential garden architecture. The riverbanks of the Yamuna River as it passes through Agra was where this artistic impulse achieved culmination in the seventeenth century garden residences and tombs sponsored by the nobles and rulers of the Mughal state and built by the craftsmen of India. One of the signal contributions of this book is the inclusion of the stories of the architects, carpenters, and masons who left their signatures and marks on the individual elements of the overall project. The residential and tomb gardens which stretched along the river and are now mostly gone gave way at midpoint to the grandest residence of all, the Red Fort which remains today the second greatest landmark of Agra. And at the southern end of the development stands today the greatest tomb ever built, one of the architectural wonders of the world, the Taj Mahal. The work is so complete that it documents not only the construction efforts but also the tourism that followed and the depth to which the Taj Mahal became embedded in the consciousness of the world. The culmination of three decades of meticulous research this substantial volume tells an engrossing story of the planning, development, and eventual decline of a unique garden city. It more than fulfills the adjective "complete" and should be in the library of anyone fascinated by the Taj Mahal, not just historians and architects. A truly extraordinary accomplishment.


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Last updated: Sat Aug 30 06:01:04 EDT 2008