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art of books - Bookshelf


The book as art, artists' books from the National Museum of Women in the arts
192 pages
The Book as Art accompanies the exhibition of the same name at the Museum of Women in the Arts in Washington, D.C., beginning in October 2006.

Teaching art with books kids love, teaching art appreciation, elements of art, and principles of design with award-winning children's books
192 pages
Easy-to-use art lessons with award-winning books.

Art

Industrial art text-books, a graded course in art in its relation to industry if3fti(tOJJ -g oBnjj due ntotfj -g >>uuog Xg 't:6i 'tf/Bu&ftg •su?isaa pajuuj-^ DjJS WAV paqot-nig suiBq?uio padjias : -h>1°D Pu« uSjsaa ■ ■ ■ ? ...

Art books, a basic bibliography of monographs on artists
542 pages
New York, Museum of Modern Art, 1938. 13. Neuenschwander, Eduard and Neuen- schwander, Claudia. Alvar Aalto and Finnish architecture. ...

Library system's art collection a little-known asset

In 1963, long before there was a thriving international art scene in South Florida, Margarita Cano — an exiled librarian and museum guide from Havana whose resume included cataloging items at the island’s eclectic Napoleonic Museum, owned by a sugar magnate — found work at the old Miami library in Bayfront Park.

“It was a wonderful library, but there was not one thing on the walls,” remembers Cano, 79. “I thought, why not bring art?”

She began to tap players in South Florida’s fledgling art world with an enthusiastic pitch about libraries being perfect places to showcase art. She also staged low-cost exhibitions, made small purchases of limited prints to display permanently, and soon, enthusiastic library patrons, artists and collectors began to donate more works.

She gave space and visibility to newly-arrived Cuban refugees and to emerging African American artists who might not otherwise have been able to exhibit their work. When the shows’ runs ended, the grateful artists — homegrown talents such as Overtown’s Purvis Young and budding national stars such as Carlos Alfonzo, who fled Cuba on the Mariel boatlift of 1980 — donated significant works to the library system.