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Books with title The Art of Scrapbooking

  • The Art of Scrapbooking

    Five Mile Press

    Spiral-bound (Five Mile Press, March 15, 2006)
    The absolutely, positively, must-have stencil book for all keen & creative scrapbookers! A fun introduction to scrapbooking with really cool ideas for lots of happy scrapping!
  • Looking at Art, the Art of Looking

    Richard Nagler, Malcolm Margolin

    Paperback (Heyday, May 1, 2014)
    In museums across the world, Richard Nagler stationed himself in front of his chosen piece of art, waiting for someone to come along and complete it. The serendipitous, unstaged encounters between art and individuals documented in Looking at Art, the Art of Looking are the results of that patience. At first, the egalitarian relationship between person and artwork seems perplexing: the art is not relegated to the background, nor is the individual considered a disruption. In Nagler's photographs, artwork and individual are presented as equals, each one mirroring and amplifying aspects of the other. The viewer takes on some of the power of the art by echoing an image or theme; and at the same time, the artwork takes on added depth by its momentary association with its viewer. The transformative power of art has been widely acknowledged, but Nagler also shows us art's need to be transformed and given meaning by humanity.Allen Ginsberg once said, β€œEvery one of [Nagler's] photographs brings to my mind a haiku.” Like that poetic form, these images display masterful skill and restraint, yet they also convey a sense of immediacy and undeniable vitality. A celebration of the connection between people and art, this book captures fleeting moments of wholeness.
  • Looking at Art, the Art of Looking

    Richard Nagler

    Hardcover (Heyday, June 15, 2014)
    In museums across the world, Richard Nagler stationed himself in front of his chosen piece of art, waiting for someone to come along and complete it. The serendipitous, unstaged encounters between art and individuals documented in Looking at Art are the results of that patience. At first, the egalitarian relationship between person and artwork seems perplexing: the art is not relegated to the background, nor is the individual considered a disruption. In Nagler's photographs, artwork and individual are presented as equals, each one mirroring and amplifying aspects of the other. The viewer takes on some of the power of the art by echoing an image or theme; and at the same time, the artwork takes on added depth by its momentary association with its viewer. The transformative power of art has been widely acknowledged, but Nagler also shows us art's need to be transformed and given meaning by humanity. Allen Ginsberg once said, ''Every one of [Nagler's] photographs brings to my mind a haiku.'' Like that poetic form, these images display masterful skill and restraint, yet they also convey a sense of immediacy and undeniable vitality. A celebration of the connection between people and art, Looking at Art captures fleeting moments of wholeness.
  • Looking at Art, the Art of Looking

    unknown author

    (Heyday Books, Jan. 1, 1657)
    None