Catalogue Mrs. Phoebe A. Hearst Loan Collection
Author : Phoebe Apperson Hearst
Publisher :
Page : 354 pages
File Size : 20,21 MB
Release : 1917
Category : Art
ISBN :
Author : Phoebe Apperson Hearst
Publisher :
Page : 354 pages
File Size : 20,21 MB
Release : 1917
Category : Art
ISBN :
Author : Phoebe Apperson Hearst
Publisher :
Page : 360 pages
File Size : 18,25 MB
Release : 1917
Category : Art
ISBN :
Author : Phoebe Apperson Hearst
Publisher :
Page : 0 pages
File Size : 29,94 MB
Release : 2022-10-27
Category : Art
ISBN : 9781016934657
Author :
Publisher :
Page : 360 pages
File Size : 45,33 MB
Release : 2019-10-26
Category : History
ISBN : 9780461420593
Author : San Francisco Art Association
Publisher :
Page : 253 pages
File Size : 47,33 MB
Release : 1917
Category :
ISBN :
Author : Dianne Sachko Macleod
Publisher : Univ of California Press
Page : 325 pages
File Size : 44,58 MB
Release : 2008
Category : Antiques & Collectibles
ISBN : 0520237293
This insightful and beautifully illustrated book offers the first feminist analysis of the phenomenon of women art collectors in America. Dianne Sachko Macleod brings a surprising paradox to light, showing that collecting, which provided wealthy women with a private sense of solace, also liberated them to venture into the public sphere and make a lasting contribution to the emerging American culture. Beginning in the antebellum period, continuing through the Gilded Age, and reaching well into the twentieth century, Macleod shows how elite women enlisted the objets d'art and avant-garde paintings in their collections in causes ranging from the founding of modern museums to the campaign for women's suffrage.
Author : James Franklin Ballard
Publisher :
Page : 110 pages
File Size : 46,62 MB
Release : 1922
Category : Rugs, Oriental
ISBN :
Author : Shepard Krech III
Publisher : Smithsonian Institution
Page : 305 pages
File Size : 38,38 MB
Release : 2010-02-15
Category : Social Science
ISBN : 1588342778
Between the 1870s and 1950s collectors vigorously pursued the artifacts of Native American groups. Setting out to preserve what they thought was a vanishing culture, they amassed ethnographic and archaeological collections amounting to well over one million objects and founded museums throughout North America that were meant to educate the public about American Indian skills, practices, and beliefs. In Collecting Native America contributors examine the motivations, intentions, and actions of eleven collectors who devoted substantial parts of their lives and fortunes to acquiring American Indian objects and founding museums. They describe obsessive hobbyists such as George Heye, who, beginning with the purchase of a lice-ridden shirt, built a collection that—still unsurpassed in richness, diversity, and size—today forms the core of the Smithsonian's National Museum of the American Indian. Sheldon Jackson, a Presbyterian missionary in Alaska, collected and displayed artifacts as a means of converting Native peoples to Christianity. Clara Endicott Sears used sometimes invented displays and ceremonies at her Indian Museum near Boston to emphasize Native American spirituality. The contributors chart the collectors' diverse attitudes towards Native peoples, showing how their limited contact with American Indian groups resulted in museums that revealed more about assumptions of the wider society than about the cultures being described.
Author : René Brimo
Publisher : Penn State Press
Page : 512 pages
File Size : 31,83 MB
Release : 2016-12-13
Category : Art
ISBN : 0271077840
The Evolution of Taste in American Collecting is a new critical translation of René Brimo’s classic study of eighteenth- and nineteenth-century patronage and art collecting in the United States. Originally published in French in 1938, Brimo’s foundational text is a detailed examination of collecting in America from colonial times to the end of World War I, when American collectors came to dominate the European art market. This work helped shape the then-fledgling field of American art history by explaining larger cultural transformations as manifested in the collecting habits of American elites. It remains the most substantive account of the history of collecting in the United States. In his introduction, Kenneth Haltman provides a biographical study of the author and his social and intellectual milieu in France and the United States. He also explores how Brimo’s work formed a turning point and initiated a new area of academic study: the history of art collecting. Making accessible a text that has until now only been available in French, Haltman’s elegant translation of The Evolution of Taste in American Collecting sheds new critical light on the essential work of this extraordinary but overlooked scholar.
Author : Kevin Starr
Publisher : Oxford University Press
Page : 415 pages
File Size : 19,13 MB
Release : 1986-12-04
Category : History
ISBN : 0199923264
This second volume in Kevin Starr's passionate and ambitious cultural history of the Golden State focuses on the turn-of-the-century years and the emergence of Southern California as a regional culture in its own right. "How hauntingly beautiful, how replete with lost possibilities, seems that Southern California of two and three generations ago, now that a dramatically diferent society has emerged in its place," writes Starr. As he recreates the "lost California," Starr examines the rich variety of elements that figured in the growth of the Southern California way of life: the Spanish/Mexican roots, the fertile land, the Mediterranean-like climate, the special styles in architecture, the rise of Hollywood. He gives us a broad array of engaging (and often eccentric) characters: from Harrision Gray Otis to Helen Hunt Jackson to Cecil B. DeMille. Whether discussing the growth of winemaking or the burgeoning of reform movements, Starr keeps his central theme in sharp focus: how Californians defined their identity to themselves and to the nation.