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The Cult of the Statuette In Late Victorian Britain (No. 31)

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Ideas for Sculpture
Reproduction lithograph
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Freud's Sculpture

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The Sculpture of David Nash

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Ring Binder

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Gravity's Angel

£ 15.00

The New Monumentality
Gerard Byrne, Dominique Gonzalez-Foerster & Dorit Margreiter
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Peter Scheemakers: 'The Famous Statuary' 1691-1781 (No.14)

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Duel - Tracy Mackenna & Karla Sachse (No.12)

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Hands On! Creative projects

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Rodin
The Zola of Sculpture
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Claude Heath
Drawing from Sculpture
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Kenneth Armitage
Life and Work
£ 35.00

Henry Moore Critical Essays

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Le Corbusier - Savina (No. 32)

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Magdalena Jetelova

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David Nash
The Line of Cut/Elements of Drawing
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Reclining Figure: Dawn
Reproduction lithograph
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Vittorio Messina

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Sculpture of Austin Wright

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Private View - Contemporary Art in the Bowes Museum

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Wolfgang Laib
A Scented Journey
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Quatremere de Quincy's Role in the Revival of Polychromy in Sculpture (No.10)

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Pre-Raphaelite Sculpture
Nature and Imagination in British Sculpture 1848-1914
£ 30.00

Attending to the Barely Made (No.29)

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Sleep in Sculpture - Babies from the Bowes (No.13)

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The Sculpture of Frank Dobson

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The Sculpture of Stephen Cox

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Eight Reclining Figures II
Reproduction lithograph
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Hans Arp
Arp Reliefs
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Leaving tracks - artranspennine98

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The Sculpture of Michael Sandle

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Sculpture in Painting

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Depth of Field: the place of relief in the time of Donatello

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Complete Drawings Volume 1
1916-29
£ 75.00

At One Remove

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Scuplture in 20th-century Britain Both Volumes

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Leeds' Sculpture Collections Works on Paper Concise Catalogue

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Ralph Brown
Sculpture & Drawings
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Sculpture in Literature (No.28)

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London's War: The Shelter Drawings of Henry Moore

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The Encounter and The Struggle - Lipchitz Maquettes 1928-1942 (No.26)

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The Object Sculpture - Paperback

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Sculpture and Psychoanalysis

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Sculpture and the Garden

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Dom Hans van der Laan - The Line Under the Spell of its Measure

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Figuring Space
Sculpture/Furniture from Mies to Moore
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Hounds in Leash - The Dog in 18th and 19th Century Sculpture

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Gilbert Bayes (1872-1953) - From Arts and Crafts to the Light Monumental (No.23)

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The Very Impress of the Object - Photographing Sculpture from Fox Talbot to the Present Day (No.5)

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White Forms
Reproduction lithograph
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Reclining Figure Against Sea and Rocks
Reproduction lithograph
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Modern Sculpture Reader

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The Space of the Page - Sequence, Continuity and Material (No.22)

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Belvedere

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Phill Hopkins
Aeroplane Dreams
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The Cauldron

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Imi Knoebel: Primary Structures 1966/2006

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Guide to the Henry Moore Institute Archive

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Etienne Martin (No.27)

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Jaki Irvine
Plans for Forgotten Works
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The Sculpture of Eric Kennington

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Espaco Aberto/Espaco Fechado
Sites for Sculpture in Modern Brazil
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Against Nature
the hybrid forms of modern sculpture
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Henry Moore's Sheep Sketchbook (Softback)

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Bernard Meadows
Sculpture and Drawings
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The Object Sculpture - Hardback

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Robert Clark
Plans for the Real World Parts 1-12
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The Alliance of Sculpture and Architecture

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Bronze - The Power of Life and Death

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Henry Moore's Sheep Sketchbook (Hardback)

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Henry Moore silk scarf: Family Groups
The original design on this scarf - entitled 'Family Groups' - was created c.1946 by Henry Moore, and was reproduced on this scarf for the launch of Tate's Henry Moore exhibition, © Ascher Studio/The Henry Moore Foundation.
£ 150

Henry Moore Tapestries

£ 17.50

Michael Kidner - Making Maps, Looking for Landmarks (No.16)

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Leeds' Sculpture Collections Illustrated Concise Catalogue

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Art in Public Places
the archive of the PADT
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The Sculpture of William Turnbull

£ 45.00

An Introduction to Henry Moore

£ 8.00

Iconoclasm

Contested Objects, Contested Terms

Iconoclasm: Contested Objects, Contested Terms

Cover

Ashgate
Hardback
294 pp
234 x 156 mm
62 B/W illustrations
ISBN: 978-0-7546-5421-6
British Library Reference: 701'.03
Library of Congress Reference: 2006032753
2007

In 2003 the Henry Moore Institute launched a new series, Subject/Object: New Studies in Sculpture, published with Ashgate, which expands upon the conventional historical frameworks in which sculpture is seen. We have become familiar with the notion that sculpture has moved into the ‘expanded field’, but this field has remained remarkably faithful to defining sculpture on its own terms. Sculpture can be distinct, but it is rarely autonomous. For too long studied apart, within a monographic or survey format, sculpture demands to be integrated with the other histories of which it is a part. In the interests in representing recent moves in this direction, this series provides a forum for the publication and stimulation of new research examining sculpture’s relationship with the world around it, with other disciplines, and other material contexts. The series embraces papers developed out of conferences initiated at the Henry Moore Institute, as well as looking elsewhere for new work which similarly expands the context for sculpture studies.

The word 'iconoclasm' is most often used in relation to sculpture, because it is sculptures that most visibly bear witness to physical damage. But damage can also be invisible, and the actions of iconoclasm can be subtle and varying. Iconoclastic acts include the addition of objects and accessories, as well as their removal, or may be represented in text or imagery that never materially affects the original object.

This book brings together a collection of essays each of which fundamentally questions the meaning of the word iconoclasm as a descriptive category. Each contribution examines the impact of iconoclastic acts on different representational forms, and assesses the development and historical implications of these various destructive and transformative behaviours.

Contents: Introduction, Stacy Boldrick and Richard Clay; What does iconoclasm create? what does preservation destroy? reflections on iconoclasm in East Asia, Fabio Rambelli and Eric Reinders; Attacks on automata and eviscerated sculptures, Aura Satz; Iconoclasm and consumption: or, household management according to Thomas Cromwell, Matthew Hunter; Iconoclasm, the commodity, and the art of painting, Charles Ford; Bouchardon's statue of Louis XV: iconoclasm and the transformation of signs, Richard Clay; 'Wyatt the destroyer': a vandal at Salisbury Cathedral?, Alexandrina Buchanan; Clastic icons: prints taken from broken or reassembled blocks in some 'popular prints' of the Western tradition, Tom Gretton; Making sense of iconoclasm: popular responses to the destruction of religious images in revolutionary Mexico, Adrian Bantjes; Surrealism in the Bronze Age: statuephobia and the efficacy of metaphorical iconoclasm, Simon Baker; Sturm auf das stadtbild: on the treatment of Wilhelminian architectural decoration in the 20th century, Hans Georg Hiller von Gaertringen; 'Idols in stone' or empty pedestals? debating revolutionary iconoclasm in the post-Soviet transition, Polly Jones; Hermetic huts and modern state: the politics of iconoclasm in West Africa, Ramon Sarró; Select bibliography; Index.

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