home *** CD-ROM | disk | FTP | other *** search
- <text id=93TT0758>
- <title>
- Dec. 13, 1993: The Arts & Media:Books
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1993
- Dec. 13, 1993 The Big Three:Chrysler, Ford, and GM
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- THE ARTS & MEDIA, Page 94
- Books
- Bound By Tradition
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p>The Year's outstanding books celebrate past glories of art,
- architecture and craft
- </p>
- <p> PRE-COLUMBIAN ART AND THE POST-COLUMBIAN WORLD, by Barbara Braun
- (Abrams; $75). African sculpture and its influence on modern
- art is well documented. Less so is the effect of ancient American
- design on 19th and 20th century painters, sculptors and architects.
- Braun traces the aesthetic roots of artists such as sculptor
- Henry Moore, painter Paul Klee and architect Frank Lloyd Wright
- back to the Maya, Aztec and pre-Columbian civilizations of Peru.
- </p>
- <p> GIRLHOOD EMBROIDERY: AMERICAN SAMPLERS AND PICTORIAL NEEDLEWORK,
- 1650-1850, by Betty Ring (Knopf; $125). For centuries regarded
- as examples of women's household craft, antique samplers now
- hang in museums and are coveted by collectors. This scholarly
- two-volume work explores the origins of needlework and its importance
- in a girl's education. Illustrating the text are samplers stitched
- by girls between the ages of six and 18. Here is yesterday's
- homework transformed into today's art.
- </p>
- <p> THAT'S THE WAY I SEE IT, by David Hockney (Chronicle Books;
- $35). The English pop artist's aggressive, arresting and restless
- work has explored nearly every medium--painting, photography
- and printmaking. Here he discusses his development, training
- and inspirations at relaxed length. A generous selection of
- milestone paintings and drawings illustrates the scope of his
- visual assault on the commercial symbolism of the middle class,
- and Hockney's private vision and public persona.
- </p>
- <p> VICTORIAN AMERICA: CLASSICAL ROMANTICISM TO GILDED OPULENCE,
- by Wendell Garrett (Rizzoli; $65). The over-the-top style known
- as Victorian celebrated the industrial age's lucky few. Never
- mind that for the masses, conspicuous consumption usually meant
- an advanced case of tuberculosis. Still, the rich could be both
- showy and tasteful. Garrett's homage to opulent eclecticism
- guides us through the layered textures and studied array of
- objets that whisper "old money" while at the same time suggesting
- the mother of all garage sales.
- </p>
- <p> THE EGYPTIAN JUKEBOX, by Nick Bantock (Viking; $18.95). A taste
- for archeology and an itch for puzzle solving will enhance enjoyment
- of this intriguing combination of art book and mystery story
- by the popular author of the Griffin & Sabine books. The illustrations
- are composed of curious knickknacks found in a museum cabinet
- built by a missing eccentric millionaire. The artifacts, reminiscent
- of Joseph Cornell's haunting boxes, are clues to the whereabouts
- of their owner. And what of his worried daughter, who has a
- hand in the text? Stories about the missing man's adventures
- also harbor clues. Have an interactive Christmas.
- </p>
- <p> ROLLING STONE: THE PHOTOGRAPHS (Simon & Schuster; paper; $30).
- These pictures from Rolling Stone pose the question why, after
- years of star-gazing, we still find these faces affecting. Perhaps
- we needed time's wear and tear to catch up with the overnight
- ravages shown in the portraits selected for this celebrity retrospective.
- Janis Joplin is slumped on a torn couch clutching a bottle of
- Southern Comfort; a slumbering Keith Richards slides off a folding
- chair. Others superstars appear to take fame in stride: a youthful
- Arnold Schwarzenegger mugs like a film noir actor of the '40s;
- and a yet-to-be-President Ronald Reagan calmly awaits his greatest
- B-movie role.
- </p>
- <p> SPLENDORS OF ISTANBUL: HOUSES AND PALACES ALONG THE BOSPORUS,
- photographs by Francesco Venturi and Chris Hellier (Abbeville
- Press; $67.50). Most of the impressive getaway real estate shown
- in these ornate pages has waterfront views. But to live on the
- Bosporus, the neck of water that separates European and Asian
- Turkey, is to gaze at a wide cultural horizon. This is a place
- where East and West say howdy, and mean it. Differences blend
- easily on this ancient frontier, especially variations in architecture.
- This delightful volume is an introduction to a hybrid high life
- not encountered in the usual armchair package.
- </p>
- <p> JOHN JAMES AUDUBON: THE WATERCOLORS FOR "THE BIRDS OF AMERICA"
- (Villard Books and the New-York Historical Society; $75). In
- 1863 Audubon's impoverished widow sold these 464 pictures for
- about $9 apiece. The buyer was the New-York Historical Society,
- which in effect saved the national treasures from going to the
- British Museum. This superb book reproduces the lot, including
- lone raptors, happily married curlews, bouquets of warblers
- and a pair of black vultures about to tuck into a venison feast.
- An excellent biographical essay places Audubon in his world--a world where science and art could still be indistinguishable.
- </p>
- <p> ANIMA, by James Balog (Arts Alternative Press; $29.95). The
- author of this provocative picture essay about cross-species
- friendship notes that 98.4% of the genetic material of Homo
- sapiens and chimpanzees is identical. Working the 1.6% separation,
- Balog poses naked men and women in playful contact with chimps
- that appear to understand the difference between "Say cheese"
- and "Say banana." The text finds New Age connections, suggesting
- a common humanity with our wild cousins, although the link is
- still missing in the images.
- </p>
- <p> PROVENCE, photographs by Sonja Bullaty and Angelo Lomeo (Abbeville
- Press; $45). Can the camera compete with Cezanne and Matisse?
- Only in price. These 150 dreamy photos of landscapes, still-lifes
- and street scenes taken in the south of France come to $3 per
- image. They are the work of two American photographers, among
- the latest to be seduced by Provence's visual bounty, exemplified
- here by acres of sunflowers, market stalls overflowing with
- produce, tiled roofs sloping toward lush gardens, cliffs leaning
- over the sea, weathered Roman ruins and a perfectly toasted
- Yves Montand at play.
- </p>
- <p> CAMILLE PISSARRO, by Joachim Pissarro (Abrams; $67.50). The
- author has assembled more than 300 of his great-grandfather's
- paintings, many from private collections and never before reproduced
- in color. The arrangement of the work stresses the grand old
- Impressionist's innovations and technical range, beginning with
- early works from Venezuela and the Virgin Islands and those
- influenced by Degas and Cezanne. This is a reassessment that
- should broaden appreciation of an artist who is generally known
- for his variations on the French countryside and the bustling
- boulevards of Paris.
- </p>
-
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
-
-