· 1986
Fourteen authorities explore sociology, anthropology, art history of Native American creativity.
Portraits, sometimes crude in their realism or gripping in the sense of a living person, were one of the great achievements of Roman Art. The collection of one hundred portraits in the Getty Museum is one of the largest in the world. Dr. Frel surveys the history of Roman portrait art in an often controversial introduction on the purpose of portraits in Roman life and society, continuing his arguments through the catalogue analyses of the individual pieces. The occasion for the book was a loan exhibition of the portraits to the Philbrook Art Center in Tulsa. This lavishly illustrated book presents a discussion of the principal views and the uses of the portrait in ancient times. The photographs include unusual views of the back and profiles of many portraits to show the care with which they were created and their damages and reworking over the centuries. The catalogue also includes five portraits that are late evocations of the antique and outright forgeries.
· 1953
"So many and so important re the schools of various sections of Italy during this time, that our main objective has been to work with the officials of the Samuel H. Kress Foundation toward the broadest possible representation of style and approach from the mid-fourteenth century on to ... a superb single Venetian landscape of the mid-eighteenth century."--Introduction, p. 5
No author available
· 1955
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No image available
No author available
· 19??