Fabric of Vision: Dress and Drapery in Painting by Anne Hollander
Requirements: PDF Reader, 5.0 MB
Overview: Clothing appears in all forms of figurative painting, often taking up two thirds of a frame; yet it can often go unnoticed. Far more than a simple means of identifying the status or occupation of a figure, clothes and cloth are used creatively by artists to hint at ambiguities in character, adjust the emotional temperature, direct the eye or make subtle allusions.
Drawing on works by artists over a period of six centuries, from Giotto to El Greco, Matisse to Cindy Sherman, the author reveals through paintings, fashion plates, photographs and film stills how drapery in art evolved from Renaissance extravagance to Neoclassical simplicity at the end of the 18th century, and has extended to infinite uses in all genres of Modern art.
Genre: Arts & Photography > History & Criticism > Themes > Human Figure

Download Instructions:
(Closed Filehost) http://upload4earn.com/8d9i7f5dw36y
https://douploads.net/q2is3g8niuoj
Requirements: PDF Reader, 5.0 MB
Overview: Clothing appears in all forms of figurative painting, often taking up two thirds of a frame; yet it can often go unnoticed. Far more than a simple means of identifying the status or occupation of a figure, clothes and cloth are used creatively by artists to hint at ambiguities in character, adjust the emotional temperature, direct the eye or make subtle allusions.
Drawing on works by artists over a period of six centuries, from Giotto to El Greco, Matisse to Cindy Sherman, the author reveals through paintings, fashion plates, photographs and film stills how drapery in art evolved from Renaissance extravagance to Neoclassical simplicity at the end of the 18th century, and has extended to infinite uses in all genres of Modern art.
Genre: Arts & Photography > History & Criticism > Themes > Human Figure
Download Instructions:
(Closed Filehost) http://upload4earn.com/8d9i7f5dw36y
https://douploads.net/q2is3g8niuoj