Art in Detroit Public Places

Art in Detroit Public Places
Title Art in Detroit Public Places PDF eBook
Author Dennis Alan Nawrocki
Publisher Wayne State University Press
Pages 260
Release 2008
Genre Architecture
ISBN 9780814333785

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Profiles in Diversity explores the momentous transformation in Europe from 1750-1870 by looking at the lives of European Jews who experienced it.

Canvas Detroit

Canvas Detroit
Title Canvas Detroit PDF eBook
Author Julie Pincus
Publisher Wayne State University Press
Pages 292
Release 2014-04-15
Genre Art
ISBN 0814338801

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It will be essential reading for anyone interested in arts and culture in the city.

The Detroit Public Library

The Detroit Public Library
Title The Detroit Public Library PDF eBook
Author Patrice Rafail Merritt
Publisher Wayne State University Press
Pages 302
Release 2017-05-01
Genre Art
ISBN 0814342337

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A photographic tour of the Detroit Public Library’s rich art and architectural history. For the last century, the Detroit Public Library has ranked as one of the most beautiful buildings in Detroit—an important landmark as well as a significant monument serving generations of Detroiters.The Detroit Public Library: An American Classic was born out of "Discover the Wonders," an art and architectural tour of the main library that began in December 2013. Since the tour's inception, around seven thousand people have visited this structural gem. The Detroit Public Library was the result of numerous requests for a book that showcases the library's many artistic and architectural wonders. As the photographs in this book reveal, the Detroit Public Library stands as an enduring symbol of the public library, one of the most democratic institutions in America. The design of the Detroit Public Library was Cass Gilbert's vision for Detroit's Early Italian Renaissance-style library. This book honors his work with a chronological and photographic timeline of the conception and building of the 1921 Woodward Avenue Library, the 1963 Cass Avenue addition, and the library as it is today. The book goes through the library's transformative years, documenting the contributions of local and national artists such as Mary Chase Perry Stratton, Gari Melchers, and John Stephens Coppin, and includes photographs of the rooms they have decorated with murals, mosaics, painted windows, bronze works, architectural elements, and ornamentation. In preparing The Detroit Public Library, the authors had two fundamental desires, as they note in their preface. The first was to celebrate the main library's design using both historic and contemporary images, the latter contributed by a number of photographers presently working in Detroit. The second was "to share with the world the beauty and elegance of a grand building in a great city that, even through the most difficult times, has sustained one of the most magnificent neo-classical buildings in the country." The Detroit Public Library unites the interests of history buffs, art enthusiasts, library lovers, and Detroit-area locals with a tribute to one of the city's most impressive structures. This book will appeal to those looking to learn about the builders, the history, and the stories that brought the Detroit Public Library to fruition.

Talking Shops

Talking Shops
Title Talking Shops PDF eBook
Author David Clements
Publisher
Pages 182
Release 2005
Genre Architecture
ISBN

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Cruise down the inner-city streets of Detroit and your eyes take in an array of familiar images of poverty and decay. In Talking Shops, Clements captures mural facades that transform what might have been a typical urban landscape into a canvas for some of the city's most vibrant folk art.

Beautiful Terrible Ruins

Beautiful Terrible Ruins
Title Beautiful Terrible Ruins PDF eBook
Author Dora Apel
Publisher Rutgers University Press
Pages 229
Release 2015-06-23
Genre Architecture
ISBN 0813574099

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Once the manufacturing powerhouse of the nation, Detroit has become emblematic of failing cities everywhere—the paradigmatic city of ruins—and the epicenter of an explosive growth in images of urban decay. In Beautiful Terrible Ruins, art historian Dora Apel explores a wide array of these images, ranging from photography, advertising, and television, to documentaries, video games, and zombie and disaster films. Apel shows how Detroit has become pivotal to an expanding network of ruin imagery, imagery ultimately driven by a pervasive and growing cultural pessimism, a loss of faith in progress, and a deepening fear that worse times are coming. The images of Detroit’s decay speak to the overarching anxieties of our era: increasing poverty, declining wages and social services, inadequate health care, unemployment, homelessness, and ecological disaster—in short, the failure of capitalism. Apel reveals how, through the aesthetic distancing of representation, the haunted beauty and fascination of ruin imagery, embodied by Detroit’s abandoned downtown skyscrapers, empty urban spaces, decaying factories, and derelict neighborhoods help us to cope with our fears. But Apel warns that these images, while pleasurable, have little explanatory power, lulling us into seeing Detroit’s deterioration as either inevitable or the city’s own fault, and absolving the real agents of decline—corporate disinvestment and globalization. Beautiful Terrible Ruins helps us understand the ways that the pleasure and the horror of urban decay hold us in thrall.

Essay'd

Essay'd
Title Essay'd PDF eBook
Author Steve Panton
Publisher
Pages 0
Release 2016
Genre Art, American
ISBN 9780814342275

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Thirty illustrated essays highlighting a variety of best-loved and little-known Detroit artists.

Places of Public Memory

Places of Public Memory
Title Places of Public Memory PDF eBook
Author Greg Dickinson
Publisher University of Alabama Press
Pages 296
Release 2010-08-02
Genre Architecture
ISBN 0817356134

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Though we live in a time when memory seems to be losing its hold on communities, memory remains central to personal, communal, and national identities. And although popular and public discourses from speeches to films invite a shared sense of the past, official sites of memory such as memorials, museums, and battlefields embody unique rhetorical principles. Places of Public Memory: The Rhetoric of Museums and Memorials is a sustained and rigorous consideration of the intersections of memory, place, and rhetoric. From the mnemonic systems inscribed upon ancient architecture to the roadside acci