Art & Architecture

A complex subject: A conversation with Dita Amory about Madame Cézanne

Today we’re sharing a new dispatch from the blog of The Metropolitan Museum of Art: a conversation between Rachel High, Editorial Assistant at the Museum, and Dita Amory, curator of The Robert Lehman Collection, The Metropolitan Museum of Art and also curator of the current exhibition Madame Cézanne and author of

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We’re having a street photography contest inspired by The World Atlas of Street Photography!

We’re getting into the spirit of giving early this year: keep checking this blog over the coming weeks for plenty of chances to win copies of marvelous art and architecture titles. Today, an opportunity to win a copy of The World Atlas of Street Photography! Photography and the city have

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Hollywood and Beyond—Ed Ruscha’s Visionary Works on Paper: Interview with Ed Ruscha by David Ebony

David Ebony— Ed Ruscha’s name is synonymous with the Los Angeles Pop art movement of the early 1960s. His work, however, has an appeal and importance that transcends merely regional concerns and conventions. Ruscha’s five-decade exploration of the American vernacular in photographs, films, paintings, artist books and works on paper,

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Notes From the Field: Sculpture Victorious at the YCBA

Ivy Sanders Schneider– The Sculpture Victorious exhibition at the YCBA greets viewers with two busts of Queen Victoria. The first is of Victoria at 21 – positioned at eye level, she appears youthful and pretty, her face bright, her shoulders exposed. The second bust, behind and to the right of

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From the Designer’s Desk: Rich Hendel

Richard Hendel is a true dignitary in the world of book design.  His work has won nearly every possible award, including from the Association of American University Presses, AIGA, Print magazine, Chicago Book Clinic, Leipzig Book Fair, and National Book Award.  He is currently a freelance designer, but has been a book

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Grand Design: Pieter Coecke van Aelst and Renaissance Tapestry—Interview with Author Elizabeth Cleland

In celebration of the publication of Grand Design, one of two excellent, brand new books from The Metropolitan Museum of Art (more on the other book to come…), we’re pleased to share a most illuminating interview from the Met’s blog, between the exhibition’s curator (and book’s editor), Elizabeth Cleland, and

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Win a copy of Peter John Brownlee’s new book Samuel F. B. Morse’s “Gallery of the Louvre” and the Art of Invention!

Did you know, before winning fame and fortune for his invention of the single wire telegraph, Samuel Morse spent his early life as a painter? After graduating from Yale College in 1810, Morse spent over two decades as an artist, taking two separate trips and spending a total of five

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Jane L. Aspinwall on Alexander Gardner

Alexander Gardner is deservedly famous for his photographs of the American Civil War, though his body of work includes images taken both before and after the war.  A current exhibition at The Nelson-Atkins Museum of Art, and its accompanying catalogue, deal with Gardner’s western photographs taken in 1867 and 1868.

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Museum Quality Books: Sculpting with Shadow

Mark Polizzotti has translated more than forty books from French, including the newly released Suspended Sentences by this year’s Nobel laureate in literature, Patrick Modiano.  Mark wrote a lovely commentary on translating Modiano for the Yale Books Unbound blog.  Mark is also the publisher and editor in chief at The Metropolitan Museum of

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Christopher Long on Kem Weber, Modern American Designer and Architect

Among our exciting fall books is one about German-born American designer Kem Weber, whose fascinating life story rivals his outstanding design work in interest.  The book’s author, Christopher Long, will be delighting California audiences next week with talks about Kem Weber – he has an event at the AD&A Museum

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