Showing 721–736 of 1968 results
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R380Warhol sought out all the most glamorous figures of his times – Susan Sontag, Mick Jagger, the Barons de Rothschild – despite being burdened with an almost crippling shyness. Behind the public glitter of the artist’s Factory, with its superstars, drag queens and socialites, there was a man who lived with his mother for much of his life and guarded the privacy of his home. He overcame the vicious homophobia of his youth to become a symbol of gay achievement, while always seeking the pleasures of traditional romance and coupledom.
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R150Wayne Barker’s artistic career spans almost two decades, marked by a bitter-sweet mix of politics, poetry, and a passion for subversion. Tracking that career from apartheid South Africa’s most violent years to a new democratic dispensation, the artist’s monograph explores the contradictory impulses of “African identity”.
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R350Published to coincide with the travelling retrospective exhibition which opened at SMAC Art Gallery, Stellenbosch, in 2010.
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Out of stock
R270Drawing on his own experiences and inspirations Hans Ulrich Obrist looks to inspire all those engaged in the creation of culture.
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R400From America to Africa to Asia, dandyism is a way of life. We are Dandy throws open the doors of the wardrobe and explores the dandy as a global phenomenon.
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R200Frances and her puppy encounter some of the plants and creatures that can be found in a Cape Town garden. Cape Town, South Africa, is in the Western Cape – home of the Cape Floristic Region, which is a World Heritage Site, and the smallest of the six recognised floral kingdoms of the world.
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R300Explore the world of artist Ruth Asawa in this lively, interactive lift-the-flap book for children ages 0–3. Ruth Asawa found inspiration everywhere—whether she looked to her children, her garden, or the warmth of her home, she believed that anything could become art.
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Out of stock
R200A catalogue published to accompany Sharlene Khan’s photography series of the same name.
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R180In this, his ninth poetry collection, Kelwyn Sole gives voice to a wide range of concerns, characteristically interweaving the personal with a wider social and political focus.
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R150What Remains is a fusion of text, dance and movement to tell a story about the unexpected uncovering of a slave burial ground in Cape Town, the archaeological dig that follows and a city haunted by the memory of slavery. When the bones emerge from the ground, everyone in the city – slave descendants, archaeologists, citizens, property developers – is forced to reckon with a history sometimes remembered, sometimes forgotten.
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Out of stock
R810A comprehensive look into the amazing science of bees, this book collects mesmerizing ultraviolet-induced visible fluorescence (UVIVF) photography of flowers and nature and offers fascinating research that explores every aspect of our relationship with honeybees
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R2500The drawing which Kentridge produced for his anamorphotic animated film “What Will Come” becomes a space-related sculpture through the view in the mirrored cylinder.
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R250Published in 2019, When the moon waxes red: Negotiating Subjective Terrain as an ‘Inside-Outsider’, an ‘Outside-Insider’  accompanies the exhibition of the same name.
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Out of stock
R1510This landmark publication accompanies an international touring exhibition devoted to Black figuration in painting from the 1920s to now, featuring artists from Africa and the African diaspora.
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R295Twelve pages of sweet pastel-coloured illustrations and clever rhymes are designed to capture children’s imaginations.