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Picturing the World: The Art of Alice and Martin Provensen
Book Details
Author(s)Nancy Willard
ISBN / ASIN1592880126
ISBN-139781592880126
AvailabilityUsually ships in 24 hours
Sales Rank1,144,592
CategoryPaperback
MarketplaceUnited States 🇺🇸
Description
"Picturing the World: The Art of Alice and Martin Provensen";
November 19, 2005-March 12, 2006.
"The Well-Tempered Book", by Nancy Willard.
Catalog Design by Rita Marshall,
23 Illustrations,
Paper, 32 pp, 8 ¾" x 8 ½",
1,000 Copies, First Edition. From "Acknowledgments," by H. Nichols B. Clark:
"...We recognize that much of what is on view constitutes a seamless collaboration between Alice and her late husband Martin. During a project, they passed works back and forth, so that their hands are virtually inseparable. Since Martin's death in 1987, Alice has continued to create wonderful books. They cover a broad spectrum of subject matter, crossing time and space. Her independent books retain the affinity for a flow and sequence of image both she and Martin learned in the animation studios during the 1940s. Of equal importance, their books forged an ongoing passion for an untutored naive art -- from Edward Hicks to Douanier Rousseau -- that reflect the simple, rural life the Provensens embraced in the 1950s."
November 19, 2005-March 12, 2006.
"The Well-Tempered Book", by Nancy Willard.
Catalog Design by Rita Marshall,
23 Illustrations,
Paper, 32 pp, 8 ¾" x 8 ½",
1,000 Copies, First Edition. From "Acknowledgments," by H. Nichols B. Clark:
"...We recognize that much of what is on view constitutes a seamless collaboration between Alice and her late husband Martin. During a project, they passed works back and forth, so that their hands are virtually inseparable. Since Martin's death in 1987, Alice has continued to create wonderful books. They cover a broad spectrum of subject matter, crossing time and space. Her independent books retain the affinity for a flow and sequence of image both she and Martin learned in the animation studios during the 1940s. Of equal importance, their books forged an ongoing passion for an untutored naive art -- from Edward Hicks to Douanier Rousseau -- that reflect the simple, rural life the Provensens embraced in the 1950s."




















