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- <text id=89TT3330>
- <title>
- Dec. 18, 1989: Tidings Of Color And Joy
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1989
- Dec. 18, 1989 Money Laundering
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- BOOKS, Page 88
- Tidings of Color and Joy
- </hdr><body>
- <p>An orchid at the Arctic Circle? A chair carved like a
- sunflower? A teapot shaped like a bellhop? These beauties to
- behold can be a gift to give.
- </p>
- <p> CHAGALL: THE RUSSIAN YEARS, 1907-1922 by Aleksandr Kamensky
- (Rizzoli; $100). Like the figures in his paintings, Marc
- Chagall (1887-1985) floated over formal artistic boundaries.
- This book tracks his flight from the Russian village that gave
- him his themes and folk style to St. Petersburg and beyond,
- where he reflected his past in modernism's bright palette and
- broken planes.
- </p>
- <p> FANTASY FURNITURE by Bruce M. Newman (Rizzoli; $50). A
- mythological mahogany bird to cradle an infant in 19th century
- Russia; jolly Black Forest bears to serve as chair-backs;
- gilded Venetian settees with shell motifs to turn salons into
- grottoes: thus did the dreams of burghers and kings like
- Bavaria's mad Ludwig II make chimeras real.
- </p>
- <p> THE WORLD WILDLIFE FUND BOOK OF ORCHIDS by Jack Kramer
- (Abbeville; $65). Bursts of magenta, delicate pastel-tinged
- whites, a green so dark it is nearly black. Blossoms fluted or
- fringed, mottled or striped, on plants 30 ft. tall or pendulous
- stems dripping with 30 flowers. Dazzling in its diversity, the
- orchid boasts some 35,000 wild species, found as far north as
- the Arctic Circle.
- </p>
- <p> THE ART OF FLORENCE by Glenn Andres, John M. Hunisak and A.
- Richard Turner (Abbeville; $385). The cradle of the Renaissance
- in glorious color and reverential grandeur -- and at more than
- 25 lbs. the lap breaker of the season. There are no crowds of
- tourists to block the view and no shadowy churches to obscure
- it.
- </p>
- <p> BONNETTSTOWN: A HOUSE IN IRELAND by Andrew Bush (Abrams;
- $37.50). Built near Kilkenny in 1737, this limestone manor
- house is revealed in 45 magnificent color photographs. The rooms
- display the cluttered charm that only two centuries of daily use
- can bring. Bush revels in textures: flaking plaster, rubbed
- wood, well-worn carpets. This book celebrates old but ageless
- beauty.
- </p>
- <p> THE ECCENTRIC TEAPOT by Garth Clark (Abbeville; $29.95).
- Why pour your oolong from a plain pot when you can pour it out
- of Brooke Shields' head? Whether they are teapots for art's sake
- or art for the sake of taking tea, ceramics critic Clark has
- cataloged the fun. The Kentucky Fried Teapot has the head of
- Colonel Sanders and the body of a plucked chicken.
- </p>
- <p> BLINDS & SHUTTERS by Michael Cooper (Genesis/Hedley; $595).
- Wherever the artists or arrivistes made the scene in 1960s
- London, Cooper was there, camera in hand. For those craving a
- (costly) glimpse of the time when the Beatles and the Stones
- ruled the realm -- "For a few years then we were just flying,"
- recalls one of the bit players -- comes this collection of 600
- works by their court photographer.
- </p>
- <p> LICK 'EM, STICK 'EM by H. Thomas Steele (Abbeville;
- $19.95). Once upon an envelope (circa 1900 to 1930), posters
- were reduced to the size of postage stamps. Some were tiny
- comedies -- a giraffe advertising neckwear, a pig promoting lard
- -- others dazzling designs by Egon Schiele and Rockwell Kent.
- They became, says the lively text, "the common man's art
- gallery," and this homage deserves the same stamp.
- </p>
- <p> DAILY LIFE in the Forbidden City by Wan Yi, Wang Shuqing
- and Lu Yanzhen (Viking; $75). As the Son of Heaven moved through
- his palaces, the Hall of Luminous Benevolence, the Gate of
- Divine Prowess, there was everywhere beauty to behold. The
- Palace Museum in Beijing has assembled a sumptuous record of
- this quotidian splendor.
- </p>
- <p> GREEK REVIVAL AMERICA by Roger G. Kennedy (Stewart, Tabori
- & Chang; $85). Its title may suggest the morning after a
- fraternity party, but this dignified volume, by the director of
- the Smithsonian's National Museum of American History, is about
- the 19th century architectural style whose graceful masses and
- columns (as at the White House) have become synonymous with
- national purpose and cohesion.
- </p>
- <p> THE SPIRIT OF FOLK ART by Henry Glassie (Abrams; $60).
- Indian brass horses share space with a New Mexican creche; an
- Irish dresser stands near an African apron; shadow puppets of
- China and Indonesia exchange greetings. Toys, dolls, samplers
- and flags show a striking similarity of expression and attention
- to detail. The Family of Man has never seemed smaller.
- </p>
- <p> SHOES: FASHION AND FANTASY by Colin McDowell (Rizzoli;
- $50). This lavish compendium is a fetishist's playground. The
- author, well versed in historical trivia and pop psychology,
- makes his breezy way from Cleopatra's sandals to Elvis' blue
- suedes to Oldenburg's Giant Gym Shoes. The trip will tickle your
- feet: "Hey there, cutes, put on your dancing boots."
- </p>
-
- </body></article>
- </text>
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