Showing 1697–1712 of 1788 results

  • Undercover With Mandela’s Spies: The Story of The Boy Who Crossed the Square

    Bradley D Steyn’s astonishing true-life thriller reveals for the first time some of the dirty secrets of a dirty war??????? within the borders of South Africa, during the dying days of apartheid.

  • Unrest – Hasan Essop and Husain Essop

    R120

    Published in 2014 by the Goodman Gallery on the occasion of the exhibition Unrest by Hasan and Husain Essop and the Standard Bank Young Artist Award for Visual Art 2014

     

  • Unsettled: The 100 Year War of Resistance by Xhosa against Boer and British

    R360

    In Unsettled, South African photographer Cedric Nunn (best known for his photographs of apartheid resistance) turns his lens to the landscape of the Eastern Cape, site of the longest and most complex anti-colonial confrontation in South Africa’s history: The 100 Year War of Resistance.

  • Uppercase #26

    R280

    Even the smallest things have the potential to inspire us in big ways.

  • Van Doesburg and the International Avant-Garde

    R320

    Dutch artist Theo van Doesburg (1883 – 1931) is perhaps best known as a prime mover in De Stijl, the Dutch artistic movement that demanded an extreme simplicity and abstraction in both architecture and painting. Here, for the first time, the true extent of his influence is explored, demonstrating that it reached far beyond Holland, throughout Europe, into Russia and beyond.

  • Van Dyck and Britain

    R660

      Anthony van Dyck (1599-1641) is one of the most important names in British pre-eighteenth-century art. Born in Antwerp, he was a precocious talent, rising swiftly to become a leading assistant to Peter Paul Rubens, then Northern Europe’s most prominent painter. Van Dyck’s imporatnce to British art cannot be overstated; during the turbulent years of…

  • Van Gogh

    R270

    Today, the works of Vincent van Gogh (1853–1890) are among the most well known and celebrated in the world. In Sunflowers, The Starry Night, Self-Portrait with Bandaged Ear, and many paintings and drawings beyond, we recognize an artist uniquely dexterous in the portrayal of mood and place through paint, pencil, charcoal, or chalk.

  • Van Gogh and the Colours of the Night

    R450

    Throughout his career, Vincent van Gogh attempted the paradoxical task of representing night through color and tonality. His procedure followed the trend set by the Impressionists of “translating” visual light effects with various color combinations, yet this goal was grafted onto his desire to interweave the visual and the metaphorical in order to produce fresh and original works of art.

  • Sale!

    Velázquez

    Original price was: R220.Current price is: R150.

    Meet Diego Rodríguez de Silva y Velázquez, the leading light of the Spanish Golden Age and a giant of Western art history. From humble genre scenes to the ever-mysterious Las Meninas, this introductory book charts the compositional expertise, natural figuration, and masterful handling of tone that secured Velázquez’s place as “the greatest painter of all.” For more information click  here  

  • Verushka: The Ultimate Collection

    R15000

    Veruschka may indeed be the most beautiful woman in the world. But this great supermodel has always been more than just a pretty face. Vera Lehndorff transformed her image, her name, and the world in the pursuit of high fashion and of art.

  • Veuve Clicquot: Yellow

    R190

    The yellow labels of the House Veuve Clicquot Ponsardin have traveled the world; today they evoke excellence in champagne.

  • Victor Willing

    R500

    Victor Willing first came to prominence in 1955 and his mature work, based on the operations of the subconscious and with reference to writers and theorists such as Nietzsche, Sartre, and Tristan Tzara, was both responsive to and influential on the contemporary London art scene.

  • Vienna 1900

    R190

    Fifty or so artists with a different sensibility and a common determination: to be free of the bourgeois morality and its obsolete traditions. To break with the classicism of the Austro-Hungarian Empire on its decline. The Vienna Secession, founded in 1897, would shape a distinctive form of art in Vienna and all over the world.

  • Vienna 1900

    R180

    Discover turn-of-the-century Vienna in this exploration of its most important protagonists, complete with sumptuous double-page reproductions across painting, sculpture, architecture, and design, as well as an essay by Rainer Metzger. Marking the centenary of the deaths of masters Klimt, Schiele, Wagner, and Moser, this collection joins the Austrian capital in its 2018 celebration of Modernism.    

  • Villa at 90

    His assimilation of the international and sculptural revolution of the 20th Century is reflected in the power synergy that exists between his work and the varied settings in which many of his sculptures are displayed.

  • Visual Impact

    R400

    Richly illustrated with over 400 images, this is a visual guide to the most influential and highly politicised imagery of the digital age.
    Explores themes and issues such as popular uprisings (the Arab Spring, the London Riots) social activism (marriage equality), and environmental crises (Hurricane Katrina), as well as the recent Je Suis Charlie protests Global in outlook, it features exciting work from emerging economies such as Brazil, Russia, China and the Middle East, as well as the US and Europe.