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A fool in paradise: an artist's early life
By Doris McCarthy. 1990
Doris McCarthy, a distinguished Canadian landscape artist, describes her early years. At the age of 15, she won a scholarship…
to study at the Ontario College of Art. Upon graduation, she became a teacher and pioneered imaginative approaches to teaching art.L'aventure de Miguel Littin, clandestin au Chili (Le livre de poche ; #6550)
By Gabriel García Márquez, Jean-Claude Masson. 1986
Miguel Littín est chilien et metteur en scène de cinéma. Il fait partie des 5 000 Chiliens qui sont interdits…
de séjour dans leur pays. Au début de l'année 1985, pourtant, Miguel Littín est rentré clandestinement au Chili. Pendant six semaines, grâce à la résistance intérieure, il a réussi à diriger trois équipes de nationalités différentes pour filmer clandestinement, jusque dans le palais présidentiel, la réalité du pays sous la dictature militaire. Le résultat visible de cette aventure est un film de quatre heures pour la télévision et une version de deux heures pour les salles de cinéma. Le résultat lisible est autre chose encore: l'aventure de Miguel Littín, c'est de retrouver son pays sans avoir le droit de s'y montrer autrement qu'en étranger; c'est aussi de confronter ses opinions d'exilé avec la réalité de la résistance d'aujourd'hui. C'est enfin de s'interroger sur la validité et sur l'utilité de la création dans une lutte politique. On comprend dès lors les raisons pour lesquelles Gabriel Garcia Marquez a tenu à écrire ce récit. 1986. Titre uniforme: La aventura de Miguel Littin clandestino en Chile.Vermeer: le jour et l'heure : [entretiens] (Des vies)
By Jacques Darriulat, Raphaël Enthoven. 2017
Une jeune fille rêve près de la fenêtre. Le jour entre à flots, caresse les surfaces, épouse les reliefs et…
dore son visage... Dans cette intimité ouverte et recluse à la fois, les murs et les êtres reçoivent, comme une grâce, l'ondoiement de la lumière, et tout évoque un ailleurs dont le chemin s'est perdu. En un mot, le monde est beau. C'est l'unique leçon de Vermeer. Encore faut-il ouvrir les yeux... Mais comment faire ? Comment regarder ce qu'en général nous voyons sans y prêter attention ? Ou comment voir ce qu'ordinairement nous regardons sans y penser ? En donnant la parole à ces éducateurs du regard qui empruntent le chemin de la connaissance pour en venir à la simplicité même. Au bout du savoir, c'est l'évidence qui nous attend. Et la saveur inaltérée d'un monde stupéfiant, lumineux et serein : le nôtre. 2017.Lettres à son frère Théo ((L'imaginaire (Gallimard (Firme)) ; 206).)
By Vincent Van Gogh, Pascal Bonafoux, Louis Roëdlant. 1988
La première lettre de Vincent Van Gogh à Théo, datée d'août 1872, est envoyée de La Haye. Il a dix-neuf…
ans. Il ne sait pas qu'il va peindre. La dernière lettre, inachevée, Théo la trouve dans la poche de Vincent qui s'est tiré une balle dans la poitrine le 27 juillet 1890. Durant dix-huit ans, Vincent écrit à Théo à propos de tout, comme il lui envoie toutes ses toiles. Il lui montre ce qu'il peint comme ce qu'il est. Van Gogh n'est pas un peintre fou. Au contraire, solitaire, déchiré, malade, affamé, il ne cesse d'écrire, lucide, comme il traque la lumière. -- 4e de couv.This and that: the lost stories of Emily Carr
By Emily Carr, Ann-Lee Switzer. 2007
Carr began to write these stories in the last two years of her life. Enter Emily's world with stories like…
"Father's Temper," "The First Snow" and "Smoking with the Cow," stories in which she reveals details of her family life, school days, her fascination with nature, animals she loved and how she learned to smoke. Some descriptions of sex and violence, some strong language. 2007.Spring will come
By William N Zulu. 2005
The life story of William Zulu, a linocut artist, highly acclaimed for his evocative art-works. Having contracted spinal TB as…
a baby, William underwent misplaced corrective surgery to his spine in his late teens which left him paralysed and permanently wheelchair bound. But William's story is no victim's litany; it recounts with zest and humour the events of his life, his unfolding artistic development and the world of deep rural Africa in which he is rooted. 2005.A black man called Sekoto
By N. Chabani Manganyi. 1996
Drawing on a series of interviews with Gerard Sekoto and on Sekoto's extensive correspondence with art historian Barbara Lindop, this…
book explores the life of an artist who left South Africa for exile in France in order to remain true to his creative talents. This narrative of exile explores the impact on Sekoto's artistic output, specifically on scenes from his native South Africa, of the artist's tenuous relation to his adopted environment and his dependence on memory. 1996.The Group of Seven in western Canada
By Catharine M Mastin. 2002
In 1920, when the Group of Seven was founded, free rail passes were still available to Canadian artists so they…
would make images that would familiarize Eastern Canadians with the West - and almost all of the Group's members used the perk. Commentary by six Canadian scholars and curators explores the deep importance of the West for the artists and their work. Includes insights into A.Y. Jackson and Edwin Holgate's interpretations - and misinterpretations - of the Skeena people, and Frederick Varley's troubled relationships with his wife and lovers. Some descriptions of sex. 2002.Eyes (Your personal health series)
By Marvin L Kwitko, Marvin Ross. 1994
Leonardo da Vinci
By Walter Isaacson. 2017
Based on thousands of pages from Leonardo's astonishing notebooks and new discoveries about his life and work, Isaacson weaves a…
narrative that connects his art to his science. He shows how Leonardo's genius was based on skills we can improve in ourselves, such as passionate curiosity, careful observation, and an imagination so playful that it flirted with fantasy. He produced the two most famous paintings in history, The Last Supper and the Mona Lisa. But in his own mind, he was just as much a man of science and technology. With a passion that sometimes became obsessive, he pursued innovative studies of anatomy, fossils, birds, the heart, flying machines, botany, geology, and weaponry. His ability to stand at the crossroads of the humanities and the sciences, made iconic by his drawing of Vitruvian Man, made him history's most creative genius. Bestseller. 2017.Gainsborough: a portrait
By James Hamilton. 2017
Thomas Gainsborough was a gentle and empathetic family man, but had a volatility that could lead him to slash his…
paintings, and a loose libidinous way of speaking, writing and behaving that shocked many deeply. James Hamilton reveals Gainsborough in his many contexts: the easy-going Suffolk lad; the rake-on-the-make in London; and the top society-portrait painter. 2017.Wild and woolly: tails from a woodland studio
By Linda Johns. 2000
Linda Johns, a full-time painter and sculptor, has opened her heart and the doors of her woodland home and studio…
in rural Nova Scotia to a constant stream of stray and wounded creatures - some of them have moved in permanently. In "Wild and Woolly", she records a year lived in harmony with the seasons and - not always harmoniously - with her many furred and feathered companions. 2000.We were brothers: a memoir (Southern voices)
By Barry Moser. 2016
Brothers Barry and Tommy Moser were born of the same parents in Chattanooga, Tennessee, slept in the same bedroom, went…
to the same school, and were both poisoned by their family's deep racism and anti-Semitism. But as they grew older, their perspectives and their paths grew further and further apart. The brothers began to think so differently that they could no longer find common ground. After one particularly fractious conversation when Barry was in his late fifties and Tommy was in his early sixties, their fragile relationship fell apart. With the raw emotions that so often surface when we talk of our siblings, Barry recalls how they were finally able to traverse that great divide and reconcile their troubled brotherhood before it was too late. 2016.Vermeer's hat: the seventeenth century and the dawn of the global world
By Timothy Brook. 2008
A painting shows a military officer in a Dutch sitting room, talking to a laughing girl, while in another, a…
woman at a window weighs pieces of silver. These pictures offer a remarkable view of a rapidly expanding world. Moving outward from Vermeer's studio, Brook traces the web of trade that was spreading across the globe, and shows how the urge to acquire foreign goods was refashioning the world more powerfully than we have yet understood. Explicit descriptions of violence. c2008.Une femme
By Anne Delbée. 1982
Pour la première fois, un livre nous révèle la vie extraordinaire de Camille Claudel. Soeur ainée de l'écrivain Paul Claudel,…
Camille a connu, en tant que femme et en tant qu'artiste (sculpteur), un destin hors du commun. 1982.Type 1 teens: a guide to managing your life with diabetes
By Korey K Hood. 2010
A guide for teens on managing Type 1 diabetes offers strategies and tips on making diabetes a high priority, fighting…
diabetes burnout, getting help from others, and coping with school and relationships. Some descriptions of sex. For senior high readers. 2010.Twilight: losing sight, gaining insight
By Henry A Grunwald. 1999
The author chronicles his experience of macular degeneration, and the daily struggle to overcome its physical and psychological implications, and…
the discovery of what medicine can and cannot do. This is a story not merely about seeing but about living; not merely about losing sight but about gaining insight. 1999.Tout pour être heureuse
By Priscille Deborah, Julia Pavlowitch-Beck, Élise Bergeron. 2015
" Comment se donner le droit d'exister quand son frère de neuf ans vient de mourir d'une maladie incurable? Prisonnière…
de ce drame familial, Priscille Deborah peine à donner un sens à sa vie. Longtemps, elle se refuse au bonheur. Jeune mariée et professionnelle brillante, elle est rattrapée par la dépression. L'amour des siens n'y peut rien: à bout de forces, elle se jette devant le métro. Sauvée par miracle, elle se réveille sur un lit d'hôpital amputée des deux jambes et d'un bras. Elle est un bloc de désespoir, d'amertume et de honte. Son salut vient de plusieurs rencontres. Elle retrouve la force de vivre, cesse de sauver les apparences, solde les comptes du passé et renoue avec sa passion de toujours: la peinture. En quelques années, elle devient une artiste exposée dans le monde entier. Aujourd'hui, avec son compagnon et ses deux filles, Priscille Deborah a enfin trouvé le bonheur. Oui, chaque heure est une lutte acharnée contre le handicap. Mais Tout pour être heureuse témoigne d'une incroyable histoire de résilience, de création et d'amour. Je suis tombée amoureuse de la vie. "The voice that challenged a nation: Marian Anderson and the struggle for equal rights
By Russell Freedman. 2005
In the 1930s, black singer Marian Anderson was not allowed to perform at Constitution Hall. But with help from Eleanor…
Roosevelt, Anderson staged an amazing concert at the Lincoln Memorial and became an activist for civil rights. Junior High. 2005.The unknown Matisse: a life of Henri Matisse: the early years, 1869-1908
By Hilary Spurling. 2001
Hilary Spurling presents an account of Matisse's early life, from his beginnings as the son of shopkeepers in Flanders through…
his impoverished days as a student at the Ecole des Beaux-Arts. Tracing Matisse's life through his thirties, Spurling describes how the artist's stubborn northern temperament helped sustain him through many challenges, both artistic and financial, as he found his way as a painter. 2001.