923 resultados para Small art works
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v.1. Nature's serial story.--v.2. Without a home.--v.3. A knight of the nineteenth century.--v.4. Opening a chestnut burr.-v.5. Barriers burned away.--v.6. An original belle.--v.7. From jest to earnest.--v.8. Near to nature's heart.--v.9. Miss Lou and Driven back to Eden.--v.10. What can she do?--v.11. Taken alive and other stories with an autobiography [and] The home acre.--v.12. A face illumined.--v.13. His somber rivals.--v.14. A day of fate.--v.15. The earth trembled.--v.16. A young girl's wooing.--v.17. Success with small fruits.--v.18. He fell in love with his wife [and] E.P. Roe, Reminiscences of his life, by his sister, Mary A. Roe.
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At head of title: Collier's unabridged edition.
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Mode of access: Internet.
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"Works by James McNeill Whistler exhibited at the Royal academy": p. 119-121.
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Includes indexes.
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Each vol. with added engraved series title-page (with vignettes engraved after designs by T. Stothard dated 1781-82) and special title-page.
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"Printed for subscriber's only. 450 copies small paper."
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Mode of access: Internet.
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Bio-bibliographical preface.
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Mode of access: Internet.
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The booklovers Arnheim ed.
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At head of title: American art galleries.
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"List of works consulted": p. [xxiii]
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Thesis (Master's)--University of Washington, 2016-06
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The historical development, metatheoretical background, and current state of the social identity perspective in social psychology are described. Although originally, an analysis mainly of intergroup relations between large-scale social categories, and more recently an analysis with a strong social cognitive emphasis, this article shows that the social identity perspective is intended to be a general analysis of group membership and group processes. It focuses on the generative relationship between collective self-conception and group phenomena. To demonstrate the relevance of the social identity perspective to small groups, the article describes social identity research in a number of areas: differentiation within groups; leadership; deviance; group decision making; organizations; computer mediated communication; mobilization, collective action, and social loafing; and group culture. These art the areas in which most work has been done and which arc therefore best placed for further developments in the near future.