This new volume in the Frick Diptych features an essay by associate curator Marie-Laure Buku Pongo paired with a contribution by sculptor Arlene Shechet.
A fascinating, beautifully illustrated narrative of a neglected group of Italian decorative and scenic artists and their impact on American visual culture in the nineteenth century.
This brand-new publication explores the life and career of one of America's most experimental and forward-looking 20th-century fashion designers, Elizabeth Hawes.
A beautifully illustrated art historical reference book which explores in depth the central role of the Book of Psalms in the Middle Ages.
An accessible, softcover volume which takes up the unfinishedconversation about what it is to be a descendent member of the Black Communityin Newport, RI, and beyond, today.
Published on the occasion of a major new career retrospective, this new volume provides a much-needed, extensive monographic exploration of a strikingly original artist.
This major new volume explores the origins of tarot in Renaissance Italy and its contemporary relevance as an enduring source of inspiration for modern artists.
We the People tells the compelling stories of immigrants to Virginia since 1776.
NormanRockwell: At Home in Vermont explores how America's belovedillustrator Norman Rockwell (1894-1978) crafted an idealized vision ofVermont-nostalgic, resilient, and mythic-during his most prolific years inArlington (1939-1953).
A bilingualSpanish /English in-depth exploration of one of the artist’s most ambitious artworks:the monumental Acoustic Ceiling (1954) in the Aula Magna of the Universidad Central de Venezuela in Caracas.
This new publication offers a comprehensive exploration of every Black American artist represented in the Birmingham Museum of Art, Alabama's preeminent collection of art, spanning the early 19th century to the present day.