Browse Results

Showing 53,726 through 53,750 of 53,782 results

The Old Time Radio Book

by Ted Sennett

"This book is a collection of articles, quizzes, and photographs which attempts to recapture radio's golden years and provide entertainment for those who lived through them. The articles deal with many of the popular programs and versatile people of old-time radio; the quizzes should challenge even the longest memories, and the photographs- well, there were actual people behind all those voices, and they are seen here doing their jobs and doing them well." Bookshare offers many other books about old-time radio.

An Introduction to Literature and the Fine Arts

by The Editors at Michigan State College Press

A collaborative study of the arts of literature, music, sculpture, architecture, and painting in the development of the Western tradition.

Christie’s and Leonardo da Vinci’s Salvator Mundi: The Value of a Brand

by Jill Avery

Senior Lecturer Jill Avery prepared this case. This case was developed from published sources. Funding for the development of this case was provided by Harvard Business School and not by the company. HBS cases are developed solely as the basis for class discussion. Cases are not intended to serve as endorsements, sources of primary data, or illustrations of effective or ineffective management.

The History of Snowman

by Bob Eckstein

Who made the first snowman? Who first came up with the idea of placing snowballs on top of each other, and who decided they would use a carrot for a nose? Most puzzling of all: How can this mystery ever be solved, with all the evidence long since melted?The snowman appears everywhere on practically everything -- from knickknacks to greeting cards to seasonal sweaters we plan to return. Whenever we see big snowballs our first impulse is to deck them out with a top hat. Humorist and writer Bob Eckstein h...

Reality Show: Inside the Last Great Television News War

by Howard Kurtz

Dan Rather, Tom Brokaw, Peter Jennings: They were on a first-name basis with the country for a generation, leading viewers through moments of triumph and tragedy. But now that a new generation has succeeded them, the once-glittering job of network anchor seems unmistakably tarnished. In an age of instantaneous Internet news, cable echo chambers and iPod downloads, who really needs the evening news? And, by extension, who needs Katie Couric, Brian Williams, and Charlie Gibson?

Art Not by Eye: The Previously Sighted Visually Impaired Adult in Fine Arts Programs

by Yasha Lisenco

The book, in two parts, deal with avenues for adventitiously blind adult, and the blind and severely visually impaired adults in the art program.

A Treasury of Knitting Patterns

by Barbara G. Walker

This is a reference book which every knitter will want to have in hand. Walker describes the stitches knitters use and provides clear instructions for making them.

Primary Sources: Selected Writings on Color from Aristotle to Albers

by Patricia Sloane

A selection of writings about color.

From Abacus to Zeus: A Handbook of Art History

by James Smith Pierce

Chapters are 'Art terms, processes, and principles; gods, heroes, and monsters; Christian subjects; saints and their attributes; Christian signs and symbols.'

Iditarod Memories: 30 Years of Poster Art from the Last Great Race

by Jona Van Zyle

A collection of annual posters from the official artist of the Iditarod Trail Sled Dog Race. Included are stories about how each of the first 30 posters came to be created, and the stories they tell about the race.

The Necessity of Art: A Marxist Approach

by Ernst Fischer Anna Bostock

The author, an Austrian poet and critic, surveys the whole history of artistic achievement through Marxist eyes.

Understanding the Arts

by Helen Gardner

The arts of buildings, gardens, city planning, sculpture, sculpture in relief, painting, books, weaving, and pottery. Art in everyday life.

Artists At Work

by Bernard Chaet

Chaet explores the relationship between an artist's materials and technique, and the forms in which he expresses his vision. He shows that technique and vision are inseparable.

The Painter's Eye

by Maurice Grosser

A painter discusses the conventions and revolts, the psychology, techniques, and problems of painting from the Renaissance to the present day. An invaluable aid in the appreciation and understanding of art.

The Claddagh Ring

by Malachy Mccourt

Irish tales of the ring worn by many of the Irish, many of which were found at Ground Zero.

The Dark Clue

by James Q. Wilson

Fictionalized biography of an artist.

My Life And Hard Times

by James Thurber

In this autobiography Mr. Thurber's daring typewriter and unbridled drawing pencil have combined to glean his teeming life. In chapter one he tells what happened the night the bed fell on his father.

The Thames and Hudson Encyclopedia of the Italian Renaissance

by J. R. Hale

Within the vast literature of the Renaissance, this is the one indispensable book: for the student who wants a guide to the complicated maze of Italian Renaissance political history.

Expressionism

by Wolf-Dieter Dube Mary Whittall

The story of this decisive and immensely rich contribution to the history of twentieth-century art is told here by a senior curator of the Bavarian State Art Collection, largely in the vivid and intensely revealing words of the artists themselves.

Impressionism

by Phoebe Pool

Impressionism, the revolutionary movement born in France in the 1860s and '70s, was one of the most important breakthroughs in the history of painting.

Confessions of a Stripper: Tales from the VIP Room

by Lacey Lane

I started moving slowly, trying to work my way into the core of the beat. Soon, I forgot I was perched atop a bar and thought only of the music's rhythm, freeing my body to move in synch with the beat. I peeled my bottom wrap off seductively and hardly heard the whistles and catcalls that followed. Ditto for my top; I was now just a skimpy T-back away from full nudity, and the best part about it was that I was becoming more at ease with the situation. Or maybe I was an exhibitionist at heart. Or I was so goddam petrified that nothing mattered. Whatever the A A case, inside, I was celebrating. I truly felt liberated. / / Find out first-hand, as career stripper Lacey Lane unlocks the doors to the secret sanctums at the center of the action in gentlemen's clubs across America. Confessions of a Stripper puts you in the middle of the VIP Room, /here freaks, fetishists, scammers, and even normal guys match wits /ith the dancers. Here, outlandish fantasies are bought and sold, and Imost nothing is beyond the realm of possibility. These true stories, culled from Lane's years of performing in doz-is of clubs around the country, also provide the lowdown on the ins id outs of the topless trade, including suggestions on tipping, finessig the bouncers, negotiating for services, avoiding sucker traps, and ?s, even scoring a date with a dancer.

Time For Art: Art Projects and Lessons for Students with Visual Impairments

by Gail Cawley Showalter

This simple manual gives some helpful suggestions for people who want to teach art to children who are blind or visually impaired. It also gives some suggestions on projects that the students can do. It is not intended as the "all around authority" on the topic but serves as a spring board into other projects and ideas. Topics and projects include, fake fossils, aluminum repousse, papier mache bowls, wire sculptures, and raised line drawings. Good book for anyone interested in ways to adapt lessons in art for learners with special needs. Also includes art projects which relate to science.

Refine Search

Showing 53,726 through 53,750 of 53,782 results