The San Antonio Story


Book Description

Provides a look at the early history of San Antonio with a choice selection of rare old photographs from private collections.




With the Makers of San Antonio


Book Description

"A collection of carefully selected genealogies and biographies of families and persons where were closely related with early Texas history."--From the preface




San Antonio was


Book Description

Photographic compilation of the art and history of San Antonio published by the San Antonio Museum Association.




Missouri Historical Review


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Intercultural and Interracial Relations


Book Description

Part of a fully indexed 20-volume collection which gathers together significant research contributions on the social, religious and political history of women in the United States, from colonial times to the 1990s.




Urban Inequality


Book Description

This book is a printed edition of the Special Issue "Urban Inequality" that was published in Urban Science




Mary Bonner


Book Description

Mary Bonner: Impressions of a Printmaker is the definitive account of the life of an iconic Texas artist known for her delicate etchings and prints of the places and people that make South Texas unique. Mary Bonner begins with the artist’s early years in San Antonio and continues through her awakening as an artist at the Woodstock colony in upstate New York in summer 1922 to her years in France under the instruction of master printmaker Édouard Henri Léon. In Paris, Bonner began entering her work in juried exhibitions, and these early Paris prints were met with some acclaim. She came into her own when she began experimenting with a more innovative and modern style, exemplified by Les cowboys, a three-part frieze inspired by memories of her family’s ranch in Texas. After several years of dedicated study in Paris, Bonner began splitting her time between San Antonio and Paris. By 1928 she had begun to take on the causes of art and conservation in San Antonio, devoting less time to her own work. She spent the last years of her life at the family residence in San Antonio and died in 1935 at age forty-eight. Bonner’s legacy, both as an accomplished artist and as a steadfast advocate for the arts, lives on, especially in San Antonio. Mary Bonner is copublished with the National Trust for Historic Preservation and Villa Finale. The book will accompany a retrospective of Bonner’s work at the McNay Art Museum in San Antonio. This edition includes a new preface, an introduction by McNay curator Lyle Williams, and an afterword by Jane Lewis, director of Villa Finale.




Directory of Museums


Book Description