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Architect's Essentials of Contract Negotiation

Architect's Essentials of Contract Negotiation
Author: Ava J. Abramowitz
Publisher: Wiley
Total Pages: 0
Release: 2002-04-09
Genre: Architecture
ISBN: 9780471443650

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For architects, negotiation is explicit in every aspect of practice, just as it is implicit in every aspect of design. And now you can develop or refine the negotiation skills you need with the help of this concise, easy-to-follow guide. Written by an acknowledged expert in the field, this volume in the Professional Practice Series offers accessible, practical coverage of contract negotiation essentials related to growth, expansion, new management, internal transitions, mergers, acquisitions, liquidations, retirement, and more. Also, like all the books in this series, the information you'll find here is expressly tailored to the needs of the design professional.


Thomas Eakins

Thomas Eakins
Author: Amy Beth Werbel
Publisher: Yale University Press
Total Pages: 220
Release: 2007-01-01
Genre: Art
ISBN: 9780300116557

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The life and work of Thomas Eakins (1844–1916), America’s most celebrated portrait painter, have long generated heated controversy. In this fresh and deeply researched interpretation of the artist, Amy Werbel sets Eakins in the context of Philadelphia’s scientific, medical, and artistic communities of the 19th century, and considers his provocative behavior in the light of other well-publicized scandals of his era. This illuminating perspective provides a rich, alternative account of Eakins and casts entirely new light on his renowned paintings. Eakins’ modern critics have described his artistic motivations and beliefs as prurient and even pathological. Werbel challenges these interpretations and suggests instead that Eakins is best understood as an artist and teacher devoted to an exacting and profound study of the human body, to equality for women and men, and to middle-class meritocratic and Quaker philosophies.


Thomas Eakins

Thomas Eakins
Author: Elizabeth Johns
Publisher: Princeton University Press
Total Pages: 323
Release: 1991-02-01
Genre: Art
ISBN: 1400820251

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Why did Thomas Eakins, now considered the foremost American painter of the nineteenth century, make portraiture his main field in an era when other major artists disdained such a choice? With a rich discussion of the cultural and vocational context of the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries, Elizabeth Johns answers this question.


The Life and Work of Thomas Eakins

The Life and Work of Thomas Eakins
Author: Gordon Hendricks
Publisher: New York : Grossman Publishers
Total Pages: 456
Release: 1974
Genre: Art
ISBN:

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The Revenge of Thomas Eakins

The Revenge of Thomas Eakins
Author: Sidney Kirkpatrick
Publisher: Yale University Press
Total Pages: 608
Release: 2006-03-28
Genre: Art
ISBN: 0300128487

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Thomas Eakins was misunderstood in life, his brilliant work earned little acclaim, and hidden demons tortured and drove him. Yet the portraits he painted more than a century ago captivate us today, and he is now widely acclaimed as the finest portrait painter our nation has ever produced. This book recounts the artist's life in fascinating detail, drawing on a treasure trove of Eakins family correspondence and papers that have only recently been discovered. Never before has Thomas Eakins's story been told with such drama, clarity, and accuracy. Sidney Kirkpatrick sets the painter's life and art in the wider context of the changing world he devoted himself to portraying, and he also addresses the artist's private life-the contradictory impulses, obsessions, and possible psychological illness that fired his work. Kirkpatrick underscores Eakins's unflinching integrity as an artist and discloses how his profound appreciation of the beauty of the human form was both the source of his greatness and ultimately of his undoing. Nevertheless, the author observes, Eakins has had his "revenge," inspiring a new generation of realist painters and gaining the recognition that eluded him in life.


Thomas Eakins

Thomas Eakins
Author: William Innes Homer
Publisher:
Total Pages: 318
Release: 1992
Genre: Art
ISBN:

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The range of Thomas Eakins' (1844-1916) work is dazzling - handsome sporting scenes (sculling, swimming, baseball, boxing..), dramatic historical tableaux, psychologically incisive portraits, as well as sculptures and scientifically astute experiments with photography. His influence as both artist and teacher permeates American art history.


Man Made

Man Made
Author: Martin A. Berger
Publisher: Univ of California Press
Total Pages: 196
Release: 2000
Genre: Art
ISBN: 9780520222090

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"Berger's original readings provide altogether new and compelling ways to understand some of Eakins's most well-known paintings."--Alexander Nemerov, Stanford University "This book is most interesting. Berger rereads a number of Eakins's paintings and makes use of recent investigations about the meaning of manhood in the nineteenth century. Man Made casts much of Eakins's life and work into new light."--Elizabeth Johns, author of Thomas Eakins: The Heroism of Modern Life "During the last decade, Martin Berger has been the most perceptive and sophisticated critic of masculinity in nineteenth-century American art. With this book he consolidates that analysis triumphantly--and extends its implications, first into a consideration of all of Eakins's oeuvre, and then into related discourses of sexuality, domesticity, and race. Man Made has useful things to say to scholars in all fields of American culture. In addition, it now becomes the most interesting book on Eakins since Elizabeth Johns's groundbreaking work, Thomas Eakins: The Heroism of Modern Life, first published nearly twenty years ago."--Bruce Robertson, University of California, Santa Barbara


Thomas Eakins

Thomas Eakins
Author: Lloyd Goodrich
Publisher:
Total Pages: 394
Release: 1933
Genre: Art, American
ISBN:

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Thomas Eakins and the Cultures of Modernity

Thomas Eakins and the Cultures of Modernity
Author: Alan C. Braddock
Publisher: Univ of California Press
Total Pages: 304
Release: 2009-03-31
Genre: Art
ISBN: 0520255208

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"Thomas Eakins and the Cultures of Modernity is the first book to situate Philadelphia's greatest realist painter in relation to the historical discourse of cultural difference. In this study Alan C. Braddock reveals that modern anthropological perceptions of "culture," which many art historians attribute to Eakins, did not become current until after the artist's death in 1916. Braddock finds in the work of Thomas Eakins a lifelong engagement with aesthetic and social currents that extended well beyond his native city of Philadelphia, indicating the persistence of a worldly sensibility long after he had concluded his formative studies in Europe during the 1860s. Braddock shows how Eakins developed a localized cosmopolitanism all his own, based in Philadelphia but tapped into a global field of visual production."--Jacket.