Rhapsody in Blue on Canvas

Rhapsody in Blue on Canvas
Author: Don W. Smith
Publisher: CreateSpace
Total Pages: 48
Release: 2013-06-20
Genre: Art
ISBN: 9781490496443

Famous Kansas City night clubs portrayed in original acrylic paintings on blue canvas along with original piano sheet music of the sounds of the golden era of jazz during the 1930's, 40's, 50's and 60's. The famous Kansas City night clubs illustrated in this book are: Mardi Gras, Deluxe Night Club, The Hey Hey Club, House Of Swing, Papa's Place, The Wiggle Inn, The Blue Room, Harlem Club, Dante Inferno, The Chesterfield Club, Derby Tavern, Fox's, King Kong Club, Milton's Tap Room, Red & Dutch, The Play-Mor Ballroom. The Rhapsody in Blues On Canvas Music CD featuring the full melody, piano, bass guitar and drums parts of the music illustrated in this book can be sampled and down-loaded at Amazon.com MP3.

Rhapsody in Blue

Rhapsody in Blue
Author: Graham Williams
Publisher: Fonthill Media
Total Pages: 342
Release: 2017-03-19
Genre: History
ISBN:

Arthur Dove

Arthur Dove
Author: Rachael Z. DeLue
Publisher: University of Chicago Press
Total Pages: 330
Release: 2016-03-16
Genre: Art
ISBN: 0226142191

Arthur Dove, often credited as America’s first abstract painter, created dynamic and evocative images inspired by his surroundings, from the farmland of upstate New York to the North Shore of Long Island. But his interests were not limited to nature. Challenging earlier accounts that view him as simply a landscape painter, Arthur Dove: Always Connect reveals for the first time the artist’s intense engagement with language, the nature of social interaction, and scientific and technological advances. Rachael Z. DeLue rejects the traditional assumption that Dove can only be understood in terms of his nature paintings and association with photographer and gallerist Alfred Stieglitz and his circle. Instead, she uncovers deep and complex connections between Dove’s work and his world, including avant-garde literature, popular music, meteorology, mathematics, aviation, and World War II. Arthur Dove also offers the first sustained account of Dove’s Dadaesque multimedia projects and the first explorations of his animal imagery and the role of humor in his art. Beautifully illustrated with works from all periods of Dove’s career, this book presents a new vision of one of America’s most innovative and captivating artists—and reimagines how the story of modern art in the United States might be told.

The Art of Misdiagnosis

The Art of Misdiagnosis
Author: Gayle Brandeis
Publisher: Beacon Press
Total Pages: 266
Release: 2017-11-14
Genre: Biography & Autobiography
ISBN: 0807044903

Award-winning novelist and poet Gayle Brandeis’s wrenching memoir of her complicated family history and her mother’s suicide Gayle Brandeis’s mother disappeared just after Gayle gave birth to her youngest child. Several days later, her body was found: she had hanged herself in the utility closet of a Pasadena parking garage. In this searing, formally inventive memoir, Gayle describes the dissonance between being a new mother, a sweet-smelling infant at her chest, and a grieving daughter trying to piece together what happened, who her mother was, and all she had and hadn’t understood about her. Around the time of her suicide, Gayle’s mother had been working on a documentary about the rare illnesses she thought ravaged her family: porphyria and Ehlers-Danlos syndrome. In The Art of Misdiagnosis, taking its title from her mother’s documentary, Gayle braids together her own narration of the charged weeks surrounding her mother’s suicide, transcripts of her mother’s documentary, research into delusional and factitious disorders, and Gayle’s own experience with misdiagnosis and illness (both fabricated and real). Slowly and expertly, The Art of Misdiagnosis peels back the complicated layers of deception and complicity, of physical and mental illness in Gayle’s family, to show how she and her mother had misdiagnosed one another. Gayle’s memoir is both a compelling search into the mystery of one’s own family and a life-affirming story of the relief discovered through breaking familial and personal silences. Written by a gifted stylist, The Art of Misdiagnosis delves into the tangled mysteries of disease, mental illness, and suicide and comes out the other side with grace.

Improvision

Improvision
Author: Simon Shaw-Miller
Publisher: Bloomsbury Publishing
Total Pages: 336
Release: 2022-04-07
Genre: Art
ISBN: 1350203432

Central to the development of abstract art, in the early decades of the 20th century was the conception (most famously articulated by Walter Pater) that the most appropriate paradigm for non-figurative art was music. The assumption has always been that this model was most effectively understood as Western art music (classical music). However, the musical form that was abstract art's true twin is jazz, a music that originated with African Americans, but which had a profound impact on European artistic sensibilities. Both art forms share creative techniques of rhythm, groove, gesture and improvisation. This book sets out to theorize affinities and connections between, and across, two seemingly diverse cultural phenomena.

Rhapsody

Rhapsody
Author: Mitchell James Kaplan
Publisher: Simon and Schuster
Total Pages: 352
Release: 2021-12-07
Genre: Fiction
ISBN: 1982104015

"A fact-based historical novel, as compelling as Nancy Horan's New York Times bestseller, Loving Frank, set primarily in New York City in the 1920s and '30s and inspired by the decade-long relationship between the celebrated composer George Gershwin and Kay Swift, who was both his romantic partner and a gifted musician in her own right"--

Music and Modern Art

Music and Modern Art
Author: James Leggio
Publisher: Routledge
Total Pages: 274
Release: 2014-07-16
Genre: Music
ISBN: 1135669694

Music and Modern Art adopts an interdisciplinary approach to the relationship between these two fields of creative endeavor.

Art in Psychoanalysis

Art in Psychoanalysis
Author: Gabriela Goldstein
Publisher: Routledge
Total Pages: 166
Release: 2021-04-05
Genre: Medical
ISBN: 0429910967

A revolution is brewing in psychoanalysis: after a century of struggle to define psychoanalysis as a science, the concept of psychoanalysis as an art is finding expression in an unconventional 'return to Freud' that reformulates the relationship between art and psychoanalysis and in this process, discovers and explores uncharted routes through art to re-think problems in contemporary clinical work. This book explores recent contributions to the status of psychoanalytic thought in relation to art and creativity and the implications of these investigations for todays analytic practice. The title, 'Art in Psychoanalysis', reflects its double perspective: art and its contributions to theory and clinical practice on the one hand, and the response from psychoanalysis and its "interpretation" of art. These essays expose the "aesthetic value of analytic work when it is able to 'create' something new in the relation with the patient". The authors surprise the reader with an immense array of fresh and stimulating hypotheses which reflect the originality of their own creative process that has overturned ideas including the 'application of psychoanalysis' to art and the entity of the object of art.

Rarest Blue

Rarest Blue
Author: Baruch Sterman
Publisher: Rowman & Littlefield
Total Pages: 333
Release: 2012-11-20
Genre: History
ISBN: 0762790423

For centuries, dyed fabrics ranked among the most expensive objects of the ancient Mediterranean world, fetching up to 20 times their weight in gold. Huge fortunes were made from and lost to them, and battles were fought over control of the industry. The few who knew the dyes’ complex secrets carefully guarded the valuable knowledge. The Rarest Blue tells the amazing story of tekhelet, or hyacinth blue, the elusive sky-blue dye mentioned 50 times in the Hebrew Bible. The Minoans discovered it; the Phoenicians stole the technique; Cleopatra adored it; and Jews—obeying a Biblical commandment to affix a single thread of the radiant color to the corner of their garments—risked their lives for it. But with the fall of the Roman Empire, the technique was lost to the ages. Then, in the nineteenth century, a marine biologist saw a fisherman smearing his shirt with snail guts, marveling as the yellow stains turned sky blue. But what was the secret? At the same time, a Hasidic master obsessed with reviving the ancient tradition posited that the source wasn’t a snail at all but a squid. Bitter fighting ensued until another rabbi discovered that one of them was wrong—but had an unscrupulous chemist deliberately deceived him? Baruch Sterman brilliantly recounts the complete, amazing story of this sacred dye that changed the color of history.