Print Prices Current

Print Prices Current
Author:
Publisher:
Total Pages: 360
Release: 1922
Genre: Engraving
ISBN:

Being a complete alphabetical record of all engravings and etchings sold by auction in London, each item annotated with the date of sale and price realised.

Interpreting Objects and Collections

Interpreting Objects and Collections
Author: Susan M. Pearce
Publisher: Psychology Press
Total Pages: 364
Release: 1994
Genre: Antiques & Collectibles
ISBN: 9780415112895

Bringing together the most significant papers on the interpretation of objects and collections, this volume examines how people relate to material culture and why they collect things.

The Prints of Isoda Koryūsai

The Prints of Isoda Koryūsai
Author: Allen Hockley
Publisher: University of Washington Press
Total Pages: 340
Release: 2003
Genre: Art
ISBN: 9780295983011

He may very well be the most productive artist of the eighteenth century. Refuting outmoded paradigms of connoisseurship and challenging the assumptions of conventional print scholarship, Allen Hockley elevates this important figure from the status of a minor Edo-period artist. He argues that Koryusai excelled by the most significant measure -- he was a highly successful creator of popular commodities. Employing an "active audience" model, Hockley reshapes the study of ukiyo-e as a.

Interpreting Objects and Collections

Interpreting Objects and Collections
Author: Susan Pearce
Publisher: Routledge
Total Pages: 357
Release: 2012-10-12
Genre: Business & Economics
ISBN: 1134830378

This volume brings together for the first time the most significant papers on the interpretation of objects and collections and examines how people relate to material culture and why they collect things. The first section of the book discusses the interpretation of objects, setting the philosophical and historical context of object interpretation. Papers are included which discuss objects variously as historical documents, functioning material, and as semiotic texts, as well as those which examine the politics of objects and the methodology of object study. The second section, on the interpretation of collections, looks at the study of collections in their historical and conceptual context. Many topics are covered such as the study of collecting to structure individual identity, its affect on time and space and the construction of gender. There are also papers discussing collection and ideology, collection and social action and the methodology of collection study. This unique anthology of articles and extracts will be of inestimable value to all students and professionals involved in the interpretation of objects and collections.

The Copeland Collection

The Copeland Collection
Author: William Robert Sargent
Publisher: Peabody Essex Museum
Total Pages: 298
Release: 1991
Genre: Antiques & Collectibles
ISBN:

The Copeland Collection of 134 Chinese and Japanese ceramic figures, perhaps the most important assemblage of its kind still in private hands, is recognized internationally for the superb quality of its many rare forms. Acquired by Mrs. Lammot du Pont Copeland over the past fifty years, each of these beautifully modeled human and animal figures testifies to the unerring eye of a premiere collector.The majority of these figures are of porcelain, produced during the late seventeenth to the late eighteenth centuries, principally for export to the West. Each individual piece displays the meticulous artistry, the marvelous enameling, and the animation and wit characteristic of this remarkably innovative period in ceramic history However modest in scale, many are important works of art.--Amazon.com.

The Tastemakers

The Tastemakers
Author: Diana Davis
Publisher: Getty Publications
Total Pages: 322
Release: 2020-07-07
Genre: Art
ISBN: 1606066412

An examination of the development, role, and influence of the British decorative art dealers who invented an Anglo-Gallic style for elite interiors. In this volume Diana Davis demonstrates how London dealers invented a new and visually splendid decorative style that combined the contrasting tastes of two nations. Departing from the conventional narrative that depicts dealers as purveyors of antiquarianism, Davis repositions them as innovators who were key to transforming old art objects from ancien régime France into cherished “antiques” and, equally, as creators of new and modified French-inspired furniture, bronze work, and porcelain. The resulting old, new, and reconfigured objects merged aristocratic French eighteenth-century taste with nineteenth-century British preference, and they were prized by collectors, who displayed them side by side in palatial interiors of the period. The Tastemakers analyzes dealer-made furnishings from the nineteenth-century patron’s perspective and in the context of the interiors for which they were created, contending that early dealers deliberately formulated a new aesthetic with its own objects, language, and value. Davis examines a wide variety of documents to piece together the shadowy world of these dealers, who emerge center stage as a traders, makers, and tastemakers.