Other Categories
Art and Photography
General Architecture
Architectural Standards
Building Types and Styles
Architecture Criticism
Architecture Drawing and Modelling
Architecture Historic Preservation
Architecture History
Architecture Interior Design
International Architecture
Landscape Architecture
Materials Architecture
Project Planning and Management
Architecture Reference
Architecture Study and Teaching
Urban and Land Use Planning
General Art
Art History
Museums and Collections
Painting
Religious Art
Sculpture
Other Art Media
Art Instruction and Reference
Fashion
Graphic Design
Performing Arts
Photography
|
Art and Photography - International Architecture books
Posted in Art and Photography (Monday, October 6, 2008)
Written by John Newman. By Yale University Press.
The regular list price is $50.00.
Sells new for $34.51.
There are some available for $34.40.
Read more...
Purchase Information
No comments about Shropshire (Pevsner Architectural Guides).
Posted in Art and Photography (Monday, October 6, 2008)
Written by Almut Bettels. By Art Media Resources.
The regular list price is $65.00.
Sells new for $58.50.
There are some available for $58.50.
Read more...
Purchase Information
No comments about Traditional Architecture in China.
Posted in Art and Photography (Monday, October 6, 2008)
Written by Theodor Holman and Ludger Smit and Hripsime Visser. By NAi Publishers.
The regular list price is $17.95.
Sells new for $9.43.
There are some available for $11.00.
Read more...
Purchase Information
No comments about Siebe Swart Museumplein: Work in Progress.
Posted in Art and Photography (Monday, October 6, 2008)
Written by Adel Manai. By Thomson Gale.
Sells new for $9.95.
Read more...
Purchase Information
No comments about Architecture and Tourism in Italian Colonial Libya: An Ambivalent Modernism.(Book review): An article from: Canadian Journal of History.
Posted in Art and Photography (Monday, October 6, 2008)
Written by Verna Cook Shipway and Warren Shipway. By Architectural Book Publishing Company.
There are some available for $15.23.
Read more...
Purchase Information
No comments about The Mexican House Old and New.
Posted in Art and Photography (Monday, October 6, 2008)
Written by Volker Hassemer and Dr. Volker Hassemer. By Jovis.
The regular list price is $22.00.
Sells new for $3.49.
There are some available for $3.50.
Read more...
Purchase Information
1 comments about The New Berlin: Images.
- This is a great book on Berlin - especially for the price. It's really beautifully done and very classy. The pictures are all vibrant in color and the text is wonderful, detailed, and extensive.
As well as showing an array of the stunning post-modern architecture that is flinging up all over Berlin, this book also highlights the classics of BerlinĂ½s history, such as the Brandenburg Gate, Red Town Hall, Charlottenburg Palace, and the gorgeous square - the Gendarmenmarkt. If you want a great book, and a truly great city, at a great price - this book is for you.
Read more...
Posted in Art and Photography (Monday, October 6, 2008)
By Prestel Publishing.
The regular list price is $9.95.
Sells new for $12.28.
There are some available for $12.28.
Read more...
Purchase Information
No comments about Memorial to the Murdered Jews in Europe (Museum Guides).
Posted in Art and Photography (Monday, October 6, 2008)
Written by Antoni Gonzalez and Raquel Lacuesta. By Gustavo Gili.
The regular list price is $31.20.
Sells new for $59.87.
There are some available for $59.86.
Read more...
Purchase Information
No comments about Barcelona, 1929-1994: Guia de Arquitectura.
Posted in Art and Photography (Monday, October 6, 2008)
By Princeton University Press.
There are some available for $276.12.
Read more...
Purchase Information
No comments about Medieval Cyprus.
Posted in Art and Photography (Monday, October 6, 2008)
Written by Patrick Van Daele and Roy Lumby. By Fine Art Publishing.
The regular list price is $75.00.
Sells new for $74.98.
There are some available for $75.00.
Read more...
Purchase Information
3 comments about A Spirit of Progress: Art Deco Architecture in Australia.
- This will most likely be the regarded as the standard work on Deco architecture in Australia if only for Roy Lumby's superb essay in the first sixty-four pages. He manages to pull all the various Deco themes and personalities together so that the reader is left with an understanding of how this particular architectural style evolved across the country.
The bulk of the book uses the excellent color photography (and frequent attractive hand tinting) of Patrick Van Daele. Fortunately as he took all the photos the book has an evenness of color and style which combined with captions make the images work so well. Incidentally the captions provide a lot more information than the name of the building and location.
This is as far as my praise goes though owing to the book's production which is sadly lacking because of an excess of white space and some thoughtless editorial direction. The main problem is that so many of Van Daele's photos have been reduced in size because of some designer's whimsy, leaving empty page space in abundance. A pity because as I've said these are cracking photos. Not only are so many of them too small but where they occur several to a page the captions have the silly convention of directions: top, left, middle center, bottom right but made all the more useless because each caption has a plate number and this repeated under each photo would have been all that was needed to tie the photo to the caption.
The book's typography uses the very appropriate period typeface Futura but again thoughtless design does the reader no favors. The caption text is in a very light weight, similarly the bibliography and index will have readers straining to read anything in a domestic lighting environment because of tiny type size and thinness. My tip: read this book only in daylight!
I find it very frustrating when a book's first class text and images are devalued because of unprofessional design which contributes to a lack of editorial clarity.
***FOR AN INSIDE LOOK click 'customer images' under the cover.
- The first major book on Art Deco to be published in Australia, A Spirit of Progress: Art Deco Architecture in Australia is an outstanding accomplishment for the research of Art Deco in this country, and it is sure to become a classic in its field. From the tasteful abstract cover (a detail from the 1930s King's Cinema) and the volumes overall presentation to the stunning photographs by Patrick Van Daele it is a pleasure to hold and read. A Spirit of Progress is written in an intelligent and erudite manner that is not too dry and academic for the average Art Deco enthusiast like myself.
With each of its eight chapters being devoted to a different building type (office buildings, commercial buildings, domestic architecture, cinemas, ETC) it takes the reader on a pictorial journey that criss-crosses the vastness of the Australian continent. The book includes some stylish examples of Art Deco buildings in major capital cities such as Sydney, Melbourne or Perth and in selected smaller towns and rural cities throughout Australia. In fact A Spirit of Progress is chiefly a photographic survey of some of Australia's finest inter-war Art Deco buildings, some of which have lamentably long since been demolished. Even now in a time when our early 20th century built heritage is more admired and appreciated, some Art Deco styled buildings are still threatened with potential demolition by overzealous developers.
While we have nothing on the scale or grandeur of New York's Empire State and Chrysler Buildings, the refined classicism of London's Broadcasting House or the sophisticated elegance of Los Angeles Bullocks Wilshire and Wiltern Cinema we are certainly not lacking in Art Deco and Art Moderne architectual gems. Australia has a profusion of moderately scaled Deco structures like pubs, classy movie palaces, fine department stores and out in the suburbs, homes. Art Deco was slow in coming to Australia, reaching our shores in the late 1920s via America, so the large bulk of our Deco buildings were constructed in the 1930s and some as late as the early 1940s. This building boom was due in part to Australia recovering earlier than most other industrialized nations from the devastating effects of the great depression. During this all too brief age of relative peace and prosperity between two cataclysmic World Wars, some of our most recognisable Art Deco structures were built. Sydney has two famous Deco landmarks, the Sydney Harbour Bridge (1932) and the Anzac Memorial in Hyde Park (1934). In Melbourne they have the Myer Emporium (1933), Mitchell House (1937) and the high Deco Capitol Theatre (1924). We even have some grand Art Deco mansions like Everglades (1936) in the Blue Mountains or Burnham Beeches (1933) in the Dandenong ranges, both outside Sydney and Melbourne respectively. My home town of inner Sydney like many other modern metropolises around the world has large numbers of handsome jazz age flats and apartment buildings, some with spectacular harbour views that fetch high prices on today's market.
If like me you have an obsession with Art Deco and are considering visiting Australia, A Spirit of Progress: Art Deco Architecture in Australia would be a perfect companion guide for viewing some of our timeless Deco heritage. I urge you to buy this fabulous volume for it is well worth the price and will give you years of reading and viewing pleasure.
- Superb photographs of Australian 20s and 30s architecture, supported by the very best of architectural comment. Australia's acknowledged expert on 20,s and 30,s architectural and design heritage, Lumby has taken the often regarded 'humdrum' to the very heigths! The VERY BEST! This book is cheap at half the cost!
Read more...
|
|
|
|