The Teapot Opera

The Teapot Opera PDF

Author: Arthur Tress

Publisher: Abbeville Press

Published: 1988

Total Pages: 96

ISBN-13:

DOWNLOAD EBOOK →

"When the curtain goes up on The Teapot Opera there is no music. There are no people, either. But there are plenty of characters: there's the teapot, of course, and a white plastic stallion, a china harpist, a skull, an expresso machine, chess pieces, fruit, the Michelin Tire man, fragments of a classical sculpture, ancient books, a souvenir bust of Teddy Roosevelt, valves and gauges of all kinds, a Shriner's fez, a glass eyeball, billiard balls, and so much more."--Jacket flap.

Fish Tank Sonata

Fish Tank Sonata PDF

Author: Arthur Tress

Publisher: Bulfinch Press

Published: 2000

Total Pages: 138

ISBN-13: 9780821226865

DOWNLOAD EBOOK →

An offbeat new collection of photography by the renowned cult artist offers a fantastical odyssey into an antique fish tank populated with a range of funky knick-knacks and flea-market finds, accompanied by a series of poems that challenge humankind to seek harmony with nature. 40,000 first printing.

Snap

Snap PDF

Author: David Sprigle

Publisher:

Published: 2000

Total Pages: 110

ISBN-13: 9781883923419

DOWNLOAD EBOOK →

Partners in Print

Partners in Print PDF

Author: Julie Nelson Davis

Publisher: University of Hawaii Press

Published: 2014-12-31

Total Pages: 266

ISBN-13: 0824854403

DOWNLOAD EBOOK →

This compelling account of collaboration in the genre of ukiyo-e (pictures of the floating world) offers a new approach to understanding the production and reception of print culture in early modern Japan. It provides a corrective to the perception that the ukiyo-e tradition was the product of the creative talents of individual artists, revealing instead the many identities that made and disseminated printed work. Julie Nelson Davis demonstrates by way of examples from the later eighteenth century that this popular genre was the result of an exchange among publishers, designers, writers, carvers, printers, patrons, buyers, and readers. By recasting these works as examples of a network of commercial and artistic cooperation, she offers a nuanced view of the complexity of this tradition and expands our understanding of the dynamic processes of production, reception, and intention in floating world print culture. Four case studies give evidence of what constituted modes of collaboration among artistic producers in the period. In each case Davis explores a different configuration of collaboration: that between a teacher and a student, two painters and their publishers, a designer and a publisher, and a writer and an illustrator. Each investigates a mode of partnership through a single work: a specially commissioned print, a lavishly illustrated album, a printed handscroll, and an inexpensive illustrated novel. These case studies explore the diversity of printed things in the period ranging from expensive works made for a select circle of connoisseurs to those meant to be sold at a modest price to a large audience. They take up familiar subjects from the floating world—connoisseurship, beauty, sex, and humor—and explore multiple dimensions of inquiry vital to that dynamic culture: the status of art, the evaluation of beauty, the representation of sexuality, and the tension between mind and body. Where earlier studies of woodblock prints have tended to focus on the individual artist, Partners in Print takes the subject a major step forward to a richer picture of the creative process. Placing these works in their period context not only reveals an aesthetic network responsive to and shaped by the desires of consumers in a specific place and time, but also contributes to a larger discussion about the role of art and the place of the material text in the early modern world.