Posts by artbooks

From the Designer’s Desk (Part 1): Miko McGinty

“What happened to July’s installation of From the Designer’s Desk?” we hear you asking.  Here’s what: we rolled the July and August posts together into one fantastic, two-part double post from Miko McGinty and Rita Jules. Miko and Rita are, respectively, the Principal and Senior Graphic Designer at Miko McGinty

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Win a copy of Swedish Wooden Toys

Did you play with wooden toys when you were young?  We did.  Wooden blocks, wooden doll houses, wooden rocking horses, wooden train sets, trucks, puzzles, spinning tops, tool boxes… and we loved them.  In fact, one of our colleagues spent many very satisfying hours flipping around on wooden gymnastics equipment:

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A Sneak Peek at Colonial Williamsburg’s Quilts

We’re thrilled to announce a forthcoming collaboration with the Colonial Williamsburg Foundation. This October, they will publish, and we will distribute, a monumental and eye-poppingly gorgeous book on quilts.  By Linda Baumgarten and Kimberly Smith Ivey, and with a foreword by Ronald Hurst, Four Centuries of Quilts: The Colonial Williamsburg

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The Persian Album: The Next Chapter

In 2005, Yale University Press published David J. Roxburgh’s The Persian Album, 1400-1600: From Dispersal to Collection. Choice named it an outstanding academic book of the year, it received Honorable Mention for the Saidi Sirjani Book Award sponsored by the International Society for Iranian Studies, and it was described in

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One Met. Many Worlds. and The Metropolitan Museum of Art Guide

The Metropolitan Museum of Art generously shared following post with the Yale ARTbooks blog. See the post on their blog. Left: The homepage of One Met. Many Worlds. Right: The cover of The Metropolitan Museum of Art Guide The online feature One Met. Many Worlds. launched on June 9, and The Metropolitan Museum

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Maximum Minimalist—The Carl Andre Retrospective: Interview with Co-Curator Yasmil Raymond by David Ebony

David Ebony— When I was in college in the mid-1970s, Carl Andre was god. For those of us striving to be serious artists, writers, and art historians, Andre was the paragon. His art was coolly intellectual, deceptively simple and austere, yet surprising and provocative. Minimalism was all the rage at

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Reminiscences of a Collector

Elizabeth Malchione – Like many Yale students this summer, the Pearlman Collection is traveling abroad. Earlier this month, the exhibition Cézanne and the Modern: Masterpieces of European Art from the Pearlman Collection moved into the Musée Granet in Aix-en-Provence, France—the second stop of its international tour. The exhibition features fifty

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Nationality Doubtful: Josef Koudelka at the Art Institute of Chicago

Nationality Doubtful, a retrospective exhibition of works by Czech photographer Josef Koudelka, is currently on view at the Art Institute of Chicago.  Koudelka’s imagery first reached international audiences and achieved great acclaim through the publication of his photographs of the Soviet invasion of Prague in 1968. In the decades since,

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Sneak Peek: The Long March of Pop

We are very excited to publish, this October, a new work by eminent art historian and art critic Thomas Crow.  The paradigm-changing book challenges existing narratives about the rise of Pop Art by situating it within larger cultural tides.  Today, we share with you an excerpt from the forthcoming book,

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Happy Birthday, Lee Friedlander!

We celebrate American photographer Lee Friedlander today with a meditation on two of his recent publications. Elizabeth Malchione — As we celebrate Lee Friedlander’s 80th birthday today, I wanted to take a moment to reflect on his beginnings. His first major exhibition was “New Documents” at the Museum of Modern

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