Art
Authority Link
(OCoLC)fst01423702
Label
Art
Name
Art
Source
fast
Focus
Actions
Incoming Resources
- Subject of22
- The American West in bronze, 1850-1925, Thayer Tolles, Thomas Brent Smith ; with contributions by Carol Clark, Brian W. Dippie, Peter H. Hassrick, Karen Lemmey, and Jessica Murphy
- Resurrecting Easter, how the West lost and the East kept the original Easter vision, John Dominic Crossan and Sarah Sexton Crossan
- Gene Basset's Vietnam sketchbook, a cartoonist's wartime perspective, Thom Rooke
- Urban theater, New York art in the 1980s, organized by Michael Auping ; with essays by Michael Auping, Andrea Karnes, and Alison Hearst
- The Bible in 20th century art, introduced by Nicholas Usherwood ; [commentary by Paul Holberton]
- Beautiful terrible ruins, Detroit and the anxiety of decline, Dora Apel
- CompanĚeras, Latina lesbians : (an anthology), compiled and edited by Juanita Ramos
- Drawing aliens, spacecraft, and other stuff beyond the galaxy, 4D an augmented reading drawing experience, by Clara Cella ; illustrated by S. Altmann
- Julian Onderdonk in New York, the lost years, the lost paintings, by James Graham Baker ; foreword by J. P. Bryan
- Structure in art and in science
- America, 1585, the complete drawings of John White, [essay] by Paul Hulton
- Desert dreams, the Western art of Don Crowley, Don Hedgpeth ; foreword by Howard Terpning
- Ciao, Carpaccio!, an infatuation, Jan Morris
- Theater of cruelty, art, film, and the shadows of war, Ian Buruma
- The Easter story from the Gospels., Edited by Marguerite Northrup
- The image of the Black in Western art, David Bindman and Henry Louis Gates, Jr., general editors ; Karen C.C. Dalton, associate editor
- Maggi Hambling, war requiem & aftermath, Maggi Hambling with James Cahill
- Stone and steel, paintings & writings celebrating the bridges of New York City, painted & edited by Bascove
- Slavery, sugar, and the culture of refinement, picturing the British West Indies, 1700-1840, Kay Dian Kriz
- The Monuments Men, Allied heros, Nazi thieves, and the greatest treasure hunt in history, Robert M. Edsel with Bret Witter
Outgoing Resources
- Focus1