Home
Unshaven is best [entries|archive|friends|userinfo]
shavenwarthog

[ website | My Website ]
[ userinfo | livejournal userinfo ]
[ archive | journal archive ]

event: LACMA awesome art book sale, Th 12/13 and Fri 12/14 12-4pm [Dec. 12th, 2007|02:35 pm]
[Tags|, ]

Did you know LACMA has a research library? Well, they do. It is open to the public by appointment, and materials don't circulate. They do what museum libraries do best -- serve the curatorial staff, provide information about items in the museum's collections, and help collectors research the art market.

This Thursday and Friday, December 13th and 14th from 12-4 p.m., the LACMA Research Library will be holding its first annual holiday book sale. The library will be selling materials from its ever-growing collection of art books, exhibition catalogs, and Christie’s and Sotheby’s auction catalogs. They will have what promises to be a large collection of new and used art books of all varieties, and the prices will generally be half of what you might find these books for used anywhere else.

[via laist]


linkpost comment

book update [Jun. 21st, 2007|09:27 pm]
[Tags|]

- courtesy the extensive Venice Recycling program (ie: people leaving stuff next to dumpsters), I've acquired a nice old copy of Robert Louis Stevenson stories. Reading "Treasure Island" was a trip: every cliche in the book was there, all packaged in a format to thrill every ten year old boy.    Next in this series: "Kidnapped!"

- I've laughed out loud to Salman Rushdie's Fury.  Twice.  I didn't realize that was possible.

- Max Ernst's surreal collage novel The Hundred Headless Woman is always enlightening.  The chilling and dreamlike visual mashups are accompanied by aphorisms.  The phrases feel like they're between philosophical axioms, Zen koans, and Mad-Libs.  Inscrutable.  Highly recommended.

- today's enhancements to the collection follow a similar theme.  "The Importance of Being Earnest" is in a novella form, under a silly 1965 watercolor illustrated cover.  Burroughs' Tarzan and the Lion Man promises pure cheese, being a reprint of the 1934 edition.  The book itself is of unknown vintage, hardcover, with a library card in the back going back to 1968.


it is good to be me!
linkpost comment

navigation
[ viewing | most recent entries ]