David and Alfred Smart Museum of Art

David and Alfred Smart Museum of Art

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Presents the David and Alfred Smart Museum of Art at the University of Chicago in Illinois, featuring over 7000 objects spanning five centuries of Western and Eastern civilizations. Provides information about exhibitions, events, the collection, educational programs, and membership. Posts contact information via mailing address, telephone and fax numbers, and e-mail.


Smart Collecting

Smart Collecting

Author: Kimerly Rorschach

Publisher: University of Chicago David & Alfred

Published: 2004

Total Pages: 228

ISBN-13: 9780935573411

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The Smart Museum of Art's “Smart Collecting” exhibition runs from July 8 through September 5, 2004. The David and Alfred Smart Museum of Art at the University of Chicago celebrates its thirtieth anniversary with this lively and richly illustrated catalog of recent acquisitions by the museum. Published in conjunction with the museum’s "Smart Collecting" exhibition, this full-color volume is an up-to-date and essential reference to the collections of one of the country’s most innovative university art museums. Accompanying the images is an essay by Kimerly Rorschach, the museum’s Dana Feitler Director, that charts the growth and strengths of the collection as they relate to the teaching mission of the institution. Smart Collecting provides detailed documentation of all acquisitions by the Smart Museum between 1990 and 2004. The volume also features over fifty object entries contributed by members of the museum’s staff that highlight valuable additions to the Smart’s collection in various areas such as print and photographic art, German Expressionism, East Asian art, and contemporary Chicago-based work, including Imagism. Smart Collecting is a fascinating work that chronicles the development of this unique collection and shows how a museum is always a work in progress itself.


Two Visionary Brothers

Two Visionary Brothers

Author: David Mazie

Publisher: University of Chicago David & Alfred

Published: 2003

Total Pages: 38

ISBN-13: 9780935573374

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David and Alfred Smart were the Chicago-based founders of Esquire magazine, launched in 1933. One of the first men's fashion magazines, Esquire was also distinguished by the high quality of its literary and editorial features: the first issue included pieces by Ernest Hemingway and Jon Dos Passos, and Dashiell Hammett. The Smart brothers' other ventures included Coronet Films, the nation's leading producer of educational and training films during the Cold War era—many of which are now cult favorites. This fully illustrated biography chronicles their lives and innovations in the film and magazine publishing business.


Max Klinger and Wilhelmine Culture

Max Klinger and Wilhelmine Culture

Author: Marsha Morton

Publisher: Routledge

Published: 2017-07-05

Total Pages: 435

ISBN-13: 135155882X

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The Wilhelmine Empire?s opening decades (1870s - 1880s) were crucial transitional years in the development of German modernism, both politically and culturally. Here Marsha Morton argues that no artist represented the shift from tradition to unsettling innovation more compellingly than Max Klinger. The author examines Klinger?s early prints and drawings within the context of intellectual and material transformations in Wilhelmine society through an interdisciplinary approach that encompasses Darwinism, ethnography, dreams and hypnosis, the literary Romantic grotesque, criminology, and the urban experience. His work, in advance of Expressionism, revealed the psychological and biological underpinnings of modern rational man whose drives and passions undermined bourgeois constructions of material progress, social stability, and class status at a time when Germans were engaged in defining themselves following unification. This book is the first full-length study of Klinger in English and the first to consistently address his art using methodologies adopted from cultural history. With an emphasis on the popular illustrated media, Morton draws upon information from reviews and early books on the artist, writings by Klinger and his colleagues, and unpublished archival sources. The book is intended for an academic readership interested in European art history, social science, literature, and cultural studies.