Academic literature on the topic 'Nasher Sculpture Center'

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Journal articles on the topic "Nasher Sculpture Center"

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Tagliaferro, Linda. "Blending Art and Nature the Nasher Sculpture Center." Sculpture Review 61, no. 2 (June 2012): 28–33. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/074752841206100204.

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Dissertations / Theses on the topic "Nasher Sculpture Center"

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Lamb, Jacquelyn R. "The Patsy and Raymond Nasher Collection of Twentieth-Century Sculpture, 1967 to 1987." Thesis, University of North Texas, 1990. https://digital.library.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metadc501252/.

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Over a period of two decades, Raymond D. Nasher, a Dallas-based real estate developer, and his late wife Patsy amassed a collection of significant modern sculptures. For years, pieces from the private collection--numbering over 300 as of 1990--were on display in various museums and civic institutions, and they were installed on a rotating basis at Northpark Center, a Dallas shopping mall developed by Nasher. Since the 1987 Dallas Museum of Art exhibition, the collection has been shown in several major international museums. This study documents the formative period of the collection, the Nashers' collecting and exhibiting philosophies, and four early exhibitions of the sculptures. It includes a chronology of the Nashers and major acquisitions of sculpture.
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Books on the topic "Nasher Sculpture Center"

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Nash, Steven A. A century of sculpture: The Nasher collection. [Dallas, Tex.]: Nasher Foundation, 2003.

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Wilson, Robert A. Epitome of desire: The story of the Nashers of Texas and one of the world's greatest sculpture collections created by their passion and obsession for the best. Austin: University of Texas Press, 2004.

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1944-, Nash Steven A., Thistlethwaite Mark Edward 1948-, Nasher Raymond, and Nasher Sculpture Center, eds. Nasher Sculpture Center handbook. Dallas, Tex: Nasher Sculpture Center, 2003.

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Jane, Amidon, ed. Peter Walker and partners: Nasher Sculpture Center Garden. New York: Princeton Architectural Press, 2006.

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Amidon, Jane. Peter Walker and Partners: Nasher Sculpture Center Garden (Source Books in Landscape Architecture). Princeton Architectural Press, 2006.

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author, Craft Catherine, Hart Dakin author, Sullivan Marin R. author, and Nasher Sculpture Center, eds. Return to Earth: Ceramic sculpture of Fontana, Melotti, Miró, Noguchi, and Picasso 1943-1963. 2013.

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The Epitome of Desire. The Ray Nasher Sculpture Garden, Dallas, Texas, 2004.

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1944-, Nash Steven A., Dallas Museum of Art, and National Gallery of Art (U.S.), eds. A Century of modern sculpture: The Patsy and Raymond Nasher collection. New York: Rizzoli, 1987.

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Book chapters on the topic "Nasher Sculpture Center"

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"Nasher Sculpture Center, 1999–2003." In Renzo Piano, 62–73. De Gruyter, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.1515/9783035614572-007.

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"Nasher Sculpture Center, 1999–2003." In Renzo Piano, 62–73. De Gruyter, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.1515/9783035614558-007.

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Renfrew, Colin. "Sculpture as Landscape: Archaeology and the Englishness of Henry Moore." In Communities and Connections. Oxford University Press, 2007. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780199230341.003.0027.

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The interplay in English thought between archaeology and landscape has been a long-standing one. Even before the notion of ‘landscape’ was well defined as an artistic genre, antiquaries like John Leland became topographers, and topographers such as William Camden became antiquaries. Stuart Piggott was one of the twentieth century archaeologists acutely aware of these links, well analysed in his Ruins in a Landscape (1976), and Barry Cunliffe has certainly been another. Like Piggott, he is a graphic artist of distinction himself, often preferring to draw his own plans and sections for his final excavation reports. As an able illustrator he has taken special pleasure in the work of another notable Wessex countryman, topographer and archaeologist, Heywood Sumner. Born in Hampshire, Sumner (1853–1940) became first an artist and then, on his retirement, a Weld archaeologist. The publication by Cunliffe (1985) of Heywood Sumner’s Wessex reflects again this enduring sympathy between the Weld archaeologist and the artist sensitive to the earthworks and the rolling contours of the English countryside. Sumner was not a great artist, nor did his work add significantly to the development of British archaeology, yet he captured a quality in his archaeological illustrations and in his vision of the earthworks of Wessex which looks back to those earlier antiquaries, Stukeley and Colt Hoare, and forward to such consummate artists of the English landscape as Paul Nash and Henry Moore. He was also a close friend of another significant Weld archaeologist, noted lover of the landscape and pioneer of landscape archaeology, O. G. S. Crawford. Barry Cunliffe, an internationally celebrated figure who has initiated several significant Weld projects overseas, has likewise undertaken some of his most distinguished work in Wessex, from Fishbourne to Hengistbury Head, and in the landscape of Wessex, most notably at Danebury. His treatment of Sumner’s work, for instance in his chapter ‘Landscape with people’, shows great sympathy with the human scale of the English landscape, a quality which is also an important feature in the work of Henry Moore. To regard a sculptor as a landscape artist as I have done in this paper, would, until recently, have seemed rather paradoxical. For it is true that the ostensible subject of most of Moore’s sculptures was the human figure.
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