999 resultados para Watercolor painting, English
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n.s. no.2(1981)
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Written mostly in a copperplate hand in black ink, and illustrated with watercolor drawings.
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"The Flemish, Dutch, English, French and Italian sections of the catalogue were prepared by W.R. Valentiner; the American section by Francis W. Robinson."
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"Of this work 375 copies (of which 350 are for sale) have been printed on pure rag paper; also (for a subscriber) 30 copies (25 for sale) on hand-made paper, with an extra set of the plates. Of the ordinary edition this is no. 21."
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Mode of access: Internet.
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Mode of access: Internet.
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Plates by John Carwitham after Lairesse. They are numbered I-LXXI, with II/III and IV/V on single leaves.
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Mode of access: Internet.
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"Of this edition on large paper 100 copies are printed, with proofs of the plates."
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Mode of access: Internet.
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Mode of access: Internet.
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When thinking what paintings are, I am continually brought back to my memory of a short sequence in Alfred Hitchcock’s Vertigo. In the scene, Kim Novak’s Madeleine is seated on a bench in an art gallery. She is apparently transfixed by a painting, Portrait of Carlotta. Alongside James Stewart, we watch her looking intently. Madeleine is pretending to be a ghost. At this stage she does not expect us to believe she is a ghost, but simply to immerse ourselves in the conceit, to delight in the shudder. Madeleine’s back is turned away from us, and as the camera draws near to show that the knot pattern in her hair mirrors the image in the portrait, I imagine Madeleine suppressing a smile. She resolutely shows us her back, though, so her feint is not betrayed. Madeleine’s stillness in this scene makes her appear as an object, a thing in the world, a rock or a pile of logs perhaps. We are not looking at that thing, however, but rather a residual image of something creaturely, a spectre. This after-image is held to the ground both by the gravity suggested by its manifestation and by the fine lie - the camouflage - of pretending to be a ghost. Encountering a painting is like meeting Madeleine. It sits in front of its own picture, gazing at it. Despite being motionless and having its back to us, there is a lurching sensation the painting brings about by pretending to be the ghost of its picture, and, at the same time, never really anticipating your credulity.
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No abstract available.
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Mode of access: Internet.
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