Lusty Luks: the Art, Life and Times of George Benjamin Luks
Author: Robert Gambone
Publisher:
Published: 2015-03-21
Total Pages: 252
ISBN-13: 9781500302993
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Author: Robert Gambone
Publisher:
Published: 2015-03-21
Total Pages: 252
ISBN-13: 9781500302993
DOWNLOAD EBOOKAuthor: George Benjamin Luks
Publisher:
Published: 1973
Total Pages: 18
ISBN-13:
DOWNLOAD EBOOKAuthor: Carol Clark
Publisher: Metropolitan Museum of Art
Published: 1992
Total Pages: 273
ISBN-13: 0870996398
DOWNLOAD EBOOKThis volume in a series of sixteen that features the more than two thousand works of art in the Robert Lehman Collection at The Metropolitan Museum of Art focuses on American drawings and watercolors. -- Metropolitan Museum of Art website.
Author: Robert L. Gambone
Publisher: Univ. Press of Mississippi
Published: 2009-01-01
Total Pages: 300
ISBN-13: 1604734795
DOWNLOAD EBOOKGeorge Benjamin Luks (1867-1933) is renowned for the oil paintings, watercolours, and pastel drawings he created as an acclaimed member of the artists' collective known as the Ashcan School. His professional development came, however, from his apprenticeship as a newspaper and magazine artist. Luks spent his early career drawing cartoons, spot illustrations, political caricatures, and comic strips. This study brings Luks's early work to light and reveals the funny, often edgy, and sometimes prejudicial creations that formed the base upon which Luks built his later career.
Author: Christine Stansell
Publisher: Princeton University Press
Published: 2021-05-11
Total Pages: 437
ISBN-13: 1400833663
DOWNLOAD EBOOKIn the early twentieth century, an exuberant brand of gifted men and women moved to New York City, not to get rich but to participate in a cultural revolution. For them, the city's immigrant neighborhoods--home to art, poetry, cafes, and cabarets in the European tradition--provided a place where the fancies and forms of a new America could be tested. Some called themselves Bohemians, some members of the avant-garde, but all took pleasure in the exotic, new, and forbidden. In American Moderns, Christine Stansell tells the story of the most famous of these neighborhoods, Greenwich Village, which--thanks to cultural icons such as Eugene O'Neill, Isadora Duncan, and Emma Goldman--became a symbol of social and intellectual freedom. Stansell eloquently explains how the mixing of old and new worlds, politics and art, and radicalism and commerce so characteristic of New York shaped the modern American urban scene. American Moderns is both an examination and a celebration of a way of life that's been nearly forgotten.
Author: Museum of Modern Art (New York, N.Y.). Library
Publisher:
Published: 1976
Total Pages: 696
ISBN-13:
DOWNLOAD EBOOKAuthor: Linda Ayres
Publisher:
Published: 1985
Total Pages: 136
ISBN-13:
DOWNLOAD EBOOKAuthor: Honor Moore
Publisher: W. W. Norton & Company
Published: 2009-05-18
Total Pages: 413
ISBN-13: 0393344371
DOWNLOAD EBOOK“A striking portrait of a woman artist’s struggle for life.” —Arthur Miller Margarett Sargent was an icon of avant-garde art in the 1920s. In an evocative weave of biography and memoir, her granddaughter unearths for the first time the life of a spirited and gifted woman committed at all costs to self-expression.
Author: Munson-Williams-Proctor Arts Institute
Publisher:
Published: 2000
Total Pages: 146
ISBN-13:
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Publisher:
Published: 1951
Total Pages: 60
ISBN-13:
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