 | David Batchelor - Art - 2008 - 238 pages
This chronology of writings from Baudelaire to Baudrillard traces how artists have affirmed color as a space of pure sensation, embraced it as a tool of revolution or denounced ... | |
 | John Gage - Art - 2006 - 224 pages
A wide-ranging and engaging introduction to the place and power of color in art. Over the course of the past few centuries, the complex phenomenon of color has received ... | |
 | David Batchelor - Art - 1997 - 80 pages
Although the artists involved in producing Minimalist art did not regard themselves as a group, their work shares certain key characteristics. Looking in particular at the work ... | |
 | Charles A. Riley - Art - 1996 - 351 pages
"The first thing to realize about the study of color in our time is its uncanny ability to evade all attempts to systematically codify it," writes Charles A. Riley in this ... | |
 | Le Corbusier - Architecture - 1987 - 270 pages
Shares the influential architect's account of a 1911 trip through central and eastern Europe and includes sketches he made along the way | |
 | Betty Edwards - Art - 2004 - 206 pages
The author of The New Drawing on the Right Side of the Brain distills the complext principles of color theory into a practical, easy-to-follow method of working with color to ... | |
 | Ann Temkin - Art - 2008 - 247 pages
Featuring work by artists ranging from Gerard Richter to Damien Hirst, this book, and the exhibition it accompanies, is devoted to the mid-20th century transformation in art ... | |
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