CARRELLO vai al carrello
Libri
Totale
SPESE DI SPEDIZIONE GRATIS
PER IMPORTI SUPERIORI A
35 € IN ITALIA
70 € IN EUROPAlimiti e condizioni
#297574 Religioni

Quivi é perfetta amicizia. Francesco e i suoi amici.

Autore:
Curatore: Edizioni Biblioteca Francescana.
Editore: Edizioni Messaggero.
Data di pubbl.:
Dettagli: cm.33x33, pp.circa 200 ill. legatura editoriale in tutta tela, sopracoperta figurata.

EUR 39.00
Ultima copia
Aggiungi al Carrello

Vedi anche...

Milano, Arti Grafiche Barlocchi 1981, cm.33x33, pp.24, Edizione d'arte in 300 esemplari firmati dall'autore. 24 stampe fotografiche di opera a tempera di Frà Costantino Ruggeri. Cofanetto protett ivo in tutta tela con titoli in oro al dorso. Rilegatura protettiva alla francese in tutta tela marrone. Esemplare con dedica ad Angelo Recalcati, amico e rilegatore. EsEsemplare 190 su 300. Le 24 opere a tempera originali, prodotte tra il 1961 ed il 1980, traggono ispirazioni da foto di attori famosi che Frate Costantino Ruggeri considerava somiglianti alle descrizioni giunte fino a noi di San Francesco ed i suoi accoliti.
EUR 230.00
Ultima copia

Visualizzati di recente...

Napoli, Arte Tipografica 1993, cm.17x24, pp.314, brossura cop.ill.a col.
EUR 23.00
Ultima copia
EUR 34.00
Ultima copia
#309181 Varia
Con l'aggiunta dei dialoghi di un maestro di scuola. Torino, Unione Tipografico Editrice Torinese 1857, cm.10,5x17, pp.512, rilegatura in mezza pelle. Piatti fasciati in carta.
Note: Copertina con mende.
EUR 45.00
Ultima copia
#324115 Fotografia
London, Smithsonian Institution Press 2002, cm.18x20, pp.130, 66 tavole bianco e nero nel testo, legatura editoriale, sopraccoperta figurata. Testo in inglese. The tintype, patented in 1856, was a cheap, fast, easy-to-make, practically indestructible type of photograph that became enormously popular among the working class in the late nineteenth century. For common laborers and their families, the opportunity to join the ranks of those who owned pictures of family and friends--the upper classes--was momentous. This collection exhibits more than eighty examples of a specific kind of tintype: occupational portraits, photographs of working people with the tools of their trade. Michael L. Carlebach examines the historical significance of these tintypes and finds that they reveal a great deal about late nineteenth-century values. The subjects of these images are plumbers proudly holding their wrenches and pipe cutters, carpenters with their saws and lathing hatchets, textile workers with their spindles and yarn, icemen with their tongs. These people lived and worked at a time when a depersonalized factory system run by production and efficiency experts was beginning to dominate American industry and culture. Many of the men and women in these tintypes were part of a disappearing class of self-employed artisans and journeymen; their portraits proudly stress their individuality and the essential nobility of their work. The most common reaction of historians to tintypes has been undisguised contempt or, at best, indifference. The photographs were generally seen as hopelessly unartistic and common. Yet Carlebach celebrates these anonymous portraits and finds that they say as much about today's working Americans--who are much more likely to document their toys and leisure activities than their professions--as they do about the working men and women who proudly sat for them in a much different age.

EAN: 9781588340672
EUR 8.00
Ultima copia