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Mark Hallett

    Hogarth
    The Great Spectacle
    The Sauropod Dinosaurs
    Dinosaurier
    • Dinosaurier

      Leben und Untergang der geheimnisvollen Urzeittiere

      • 248 Seiten
      • 9 Lesestunden
      Dinosaurier
    • The Sauropod Dinosaurs

      • 336 Seiten
      • 12 Lesestunden

      Anyone with a passion for dinosaurs or prehistoric life will cherish this once-in-a-generation masterpiece.The book includes the following features: Over 200 full-color illustrations More than 100 color photographs from museums, field sites, and collections around the world Thoughtfully placed drawings and charts Clearly written text reviewed by major sauropod researchers Descriptions of the latest sauropod concepts and discoveries A field guide to major groups of sauropods Detailed skeletal reconstructions and anatomical restorations A comprehensive glossary

      The Sauropod Dinosaurs
      4,6
    • The Great Spectacle

      • 224 Seiten
      • 8 Lesestunden

      fascinating study of the longest-running annual exhibition of contemporary art, the Royal Academy of Arts Summer Exhibition, illustrated with works by many of the great names of British art including Joshua Reynolds, Thomas Gainsborough, J. M. W. Turner, John Constable, David Hockney, Grayson Perry and Tracey Emin.

      The Great Spectacle
      4,8
    • Hogarth

      • 352 Seiten
      • 13 Lesestunden

      William Hogarth (1697-1764) is certainly one of the most versatile, innovative and celebrated of all British artists. He lived at a time when Britain was emerging as an increasingly urbanized, commercialized and aggressively imperial power. Like many other artists, he exploited and benefited from these changes in British society. Among his contemporaries, it was Hogarth who commented most brilliantly on society - both positively and negatively. His work celebrates the benefits of commerce, politeness and patriotism while simultaneously focusing on the corruption, hypocrisy and prejudice they brought in their wake. In paint and in print we are shown the two contrasting sides of modernity. This book explores and explains the dramatic duality within Hogarth's work, and in doing so gives us a greater sense of the contradictions and complexities that existed within eighteenth-century British society.

      Hogarth
      3,7