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Colour and meaning. Art, Science and Symbolism

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Samurai Origines : l'enfance de l'art

Dans la continuité de la série mère, Samurai, les créateurs Frédéric Genêt et Jean-François Di Gorgio ouvraient un nouveau cycle avec Samurai Origines, en septembre 2017. Un scénario dynamique et saisissant qui nous entraîne dans un voyage initiatique au cœur du Japon médiéval. Mais cette fois, en remontant à l’enfance de Takeo, leur personnage principal.

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Dossier

Le trône de fer : les livres de la saga A Song of Ice and Fire de George RR Martin

Le trône de fer est une immense saga d’héroïque fantasy qui s’inspire de la série des Rois maudits de Maurice Druon. C’est au début des années 1990 que Georges R.R. Martin commence à écrire Le trône de fer, le premier volume est publié en 1996. En 2007, la chaine de télévision HBO acquiert les droits d’adaptations. L’auteur lui-même participe à sa production et écrit le scénario d’un épisode par saison. 

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2021, commémoration des 700 ans de la mort de Dante Alighieri

Né le 21 mai 1265, Dante Alighieri, mythique poète italien, écrivain, mais également homme politique ayant vécu à Florence, est mort le 14 septembre 1321, laissant derrière lui La Divine Comédie. Considéré comme le père de la langue italienne, il compose avec Boccace et Pétrarque cette trinité littéraire par laquelle le toscan s’imposa dans le pays. En cette année 2021, le 700e anniversaire de sa mort est commémoré, partout dans le monde.

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Banquet pour tout le monde : Astérix et Obélix ont 60 ans

Les deux Gaulois les plus célèbres du 9e art fêtent, en 2019, leur 60e anniversaire : le 29 octobre 1959, le scénariste René Goscinny et le dessinateur Albert Uderzo présentent au monde un petit Gaulois, accompagné par son ami, plus... enveloppé. Rapidement, les deux héros deviennent les figures majeures du journal Pilote.

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Street art, fresques, tags : des livres au détour des rues

Porté par des figures désormais internationales, comme Banksy, et bien d’autres, le Street Art, ou Art Urbain ne date pas d’hier. 

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Dossier

Prix du livre de la Ville de Lausanne 2024 : 10 ans déjà

Depuis son inauguration en 2014 par le Service des bibliothèques & archives de Lausanne, responsable de la stratégie littéraire, le Prix du livre de la Ville de Lausanne s'est consacré pendant une décennie à soutenir les auteurs de Suisse romande et leurs fidèles lecteurs. Une odyssée littéraire qui promet de perdurer !

Extraits

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Décoration

Colour and meaning. Art, Science and Symbolism

'John Gage's Colour and Meaning... is full of ideas... He is one of the best writers on art now alive' - A.S. Byatt 'Magnificent' - The Independent on Sunday 'Erudite but accessible' - The Architect's Journal Is colour just a physiological phenomenon? Does it have an effect on feelings? This vividly written book, the sequel to Gage's award-winning Colour and Culture, is ultimately informed by the conviction that the meaning of colour lies in the particular historical context in which it is experienced and interpreted. John Gage explores the mysteries of themes as diverse as the optical mixing techniques implicit in mosaic, colour-languages in Latin America at the time of the Spanish Conquest and the ideas of Goethe and Runge, Blake and Turner. For students and lecturers in the history of art and culture, for artists and designers, and for psychologists and scientists with a special interest in the subject, John Gage has produced a compelling study of the meaning of colour through the ages.

01/1999

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Non classé

Aurier, Symbolism and the Visual Arts

This is the first fully comprehensive study on the 19th-century poet and art critic, Albert Aurier (1865-1892), in the context of his age. Focusing on Aurier's pivotal role in the development of French Symbolist art and aesthetics, the book explores his contribution to contemporary and subsequent perceptions of Symbolism in art during a period which saw the rise of art criticism as a genre in its own right. Taking Aurier's writings on lesser-known artists such as Henry de Groux, Eugène Carrière and Jean-Jacques Henner, as well as those on Impressionism, and Van Gogh and Gauguin, the study shows how Aurier laid the foundation for the interpretation of Modernist art.

11/1999

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Architecture

Of Sand and Stones

A partir d'extraits de textes de Gaston BACHELARD, Reyner BANHAM, Laurence COSSE, Gilles DELEUZE & Félix GUATTARI, Marguerite DURAS, Jean-ClaudeGALL, André GIDE, André GUILLERME, Jean-Yves JOUANNAIS, Maylis de KERANGAL, Pierre REVERDY, Marie RICHEUX, Robert SMITHSON, VITRUVE, Emile WITH et Marguerite YOURCENAR, de dessins et de photographies de Julien HOURCADE Of Sand and Stones raconte la construction d'un programme à usage mixte (cinéma, centre culturel, centre communautaire avec théâtre boîte noire, 342 logements, commerces et jardin), construit avec un système de façade porteuse préfabriquée aux couleurs naturelles dans le quartier de Clichy-Batignolles à Paris entre 2013 et 2018.

06/2021

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Histoire et Philosophiesophie

SCIENCE AND TECHNOLOGY IN WORLD HISTORY. An introduction

In modern industrial society, the tic between science and technology seems clear, even inevitable. But historically, as James E. McClellan III and Harold Dorn remind us, the connection was far less apparent. For much of human history, technology depended more on the innovation of skilled artisans than it did on the speculation of scientists. Technology as "applied science," the authors argue, emerged relatively recently, as industry and governments began funding scientific research that would lead directly to new or improved technologies. In Science and Technology in World History, McClellan and Dorn offer an introduction to this changing relationship. McClellan and Dorn review the historical record beginning with the thinking and tool making of prehistoric humans. Neolithic people, for example, developed metallurgy of a sort, using naturally occurring raw copper, and kept systematic records of the moon's phases. Neolithic craftsmen possessed practical knowledge of the behavior of clay, fire, and other elements of their environment, but though they may have had explanations for the phenomena of their crafts, they toiled without any systematic science of materials or the self-conscious application of theory to practice. Without neglecting important figures of Western science such as Newton and Einstein, the authors demonstrate the great achievements of non-Western cultures. They remind us that scientific traditions took root in China, India, and Central and South America, as well as in a series of Near Eastern empires, during late antiquity and the Middle Ages, including the vast region that formed the Islamic conquest. From this comparative perspective, the authors explore the emergence of Europe as a scientific and technological power. Continuing their narrative through the Manhattan Project, NASA, and modern medical research, the authors weave the converging histories of science and technology into an integrated, perceptive, and highly readable narrative. "Professors McClellan and Dorn have written a survey that does not present the historical development of science simply as a Western phenomenon but as the result of wide-ranging human curiosity about nature and attempts to harness its powers in order to serve human needs. This is an impressive amount of material to organize in a single textbook." - Paula Findlen, Stanford University

01/1999

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Décoration

Gladky's Art Deco Patterns and Designs in Full Color

Architect, designer and world traveler, Serge Gladky was a major figure in the rise of the modernist aesthetic and the decorative style known as Art Deco. In that style, he created a series of compositions widely regarded as among the most inspired and innovative in modem design. Among them are intricate lattice works of geometric inspired motifs, bizarre compositions containing surreal animals and images, bold abstracts, mysterious collages of symbolic forms and shapes, whimsical Cubist-flavored constructions resembling heads, and much more. This beautiful volume, faithfully reprinted in glowing full color from rare original French portfolios, contains over 60 of Gladky's finest designs. A landmark achievement in the evolution of a great international design style, the patterns are now available for the first time to artists and craftspeople for copyright-free use in design and craft projects. Because of Gladky's far-ranging travels and studies throughout Asia and Eastern Europe, his designs and use of color brought a new and potent exoticism to the essentially Western European, Paris-centered Art Deco aesthetic. His striking originality and innovative conceptions are on display here, ready to delight and inspire artists, illustrators and craftspeople, who will find Gladky's work one of the most imaginative and beautifully wrought achievements in 20th-century design.

01/1989

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Non classé

Nietzsche and the End of Freedom

Nietzsche's writing is not some game of 'freeplay' and terms like 'intertextuality' are useless in discussing its influence. This study takes Nietzsche, then Kafka's Trial, Thomas Mann's Death in Venice, Heinrich Mann's Man of Straw, Rilke's Malte Laurids Brigge and Musil's Törless. It argues that Nietzsche mediates and modernises the dilemmas of Romanticism and that a properly differentiated account of his literary reception can illuminate the dynamics of German culture on the eve of the Great War.

07/1993

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