2015, ISBN: 9781565791268
Paperback, Hardcover
W. H. Allen, 1967. First Edition. Hardcover. Very Good. 8vo - over 7¾" - 9¾" Tall (small thin). A very good copy in very good dust jacket with slight rubbing and scuffing to jacket; m… More...
W. H. Allen, 1967. First Edition. Hardcover. Very Good. 8vo - over 7¾" - 9¾" Tall (small thin). A very good copy in very good dust jacket with slight rubbing and scuffing to jacket; minor bumping to jacket edges; slight bumping to cloth spine tips; previous owner's stamp and ink name on front free endpaper. v, [3], 278 pages + plates. First part of the author's journals; includes coverage of the author's first trip to Europe, college years and memories of the First World War. Ramsey, page 75 (US sheets). 22 b/w Photographs / Plates (chiefly portraits)., W. H. Allen, 1967, 3, Sattar Bahlulzadeh (Sattar Bahlulzade) Art BookMinistry of Culture and Tourism of the Republic of Azerbaijan - Sattar Bahlulzade's home museum.text is in RussianPaperback6.7 x 8.5 inchesSattar Bahlulzade (1909-1974)Sattar Bahlulzade was known for his unpredictability, but no one anticipated such a volatile reaction to criticism. The occasion was the opening of a new exhibition at the Baku Art Museum. Sattar had submitted one of his paintings-a view of the sea-but the work had been rejected. One of the organizing committee members told him that he had "misinterpreted" nature and that his painting needed more work."You people paint landscapes without even leaving your studios," Sattar shot back. "You just copy from postcards and photographs. I don't think you even know what nature looks like!" Suddenly, he kicked his painting, damaging it, and stomped off.This confrontation, which happened in the 1950s, illustrates Sattar's passion to create art on his own terms. As one of the first Azerbaijani artists to break away from the government-mandated style of Social Realism, he is known for developing his own unique style of painting landscapes. Though he passed away 25 years ago, his 90th Jubilee will be celebrated this year in Baku.Sattar began his professional education at the National Art Institute in Baku (1927-1931). Then he worked with Azim Azimzade at the newspaper called "Communist" for the following two years. In 1933, acting on Azimzade's advice, he went to Moscow to continue his education in the Drawing Department at the Moscow Fine Arts Institute. There he studied in the studio of V.A. Favorsky. During the summer workshops in Crimea, Russian painter Marc Chagall saw some of Sattar's sketches and suggested that he transfer to the Institute's Painting Department. So he did.In 1940, Sattar worked on "Babak's Revolt" as his final project. (Babak refers to the 7th-century figure who is considered a great hero in the region because he led a resistance against the Arabic invasion. Eventually he was captured and executed.) Even though Sattar exhibited this work, he didn't have a chance to defend his diploma because World War II broke out in 1941 and he had to remain in Baku. After the war was over, he received several invitations from Moscow to return to defend his diploma, but he never did. "Does an artist need a diploma to prove his worth?" he asked.Most of Sattar's life and creative activity were spent in Amirjan, a village about half an hour's drive east of Baku near the sea. Like the character of Majnun in the Eastern legend of "Leyli and Majnun," Sattar spent most of his time outdoors in nature, rarely going into the city or seeing his friends and family. Majnun wandered throughout nature because he was lovesick; Sattar was trying to grasp nature's beauty and capture it on canvas. He never married and didn't have much of a personal life, but those who close to him got used to his eccentricities.Though he experimented in various genres of art, his unique talent was landscape painting. At first, he used to paint nature realistically as he had been taught. But soon he developed his own style to express the emotional feeling it invoked in him. This new style was more surreal and cosmic-in fact, some of his paintings are reminiscent of photos of the earth taken from space. Using a combination of pastel colors and bold strokes, he made nature look more colorful and lively, and sometimes even more fantastic, than it did in reality.Sattar's ability to closely observe things enabled him to create subtle, sophisticated renderings of nature. He would gain delight from the bits of beauty that were expressed in stones, trees and flowers-a scene that might seem quite ordinary to other people. He would then transfer his delight onto canvas so that others could enjoy it as well.One such experience gave birth to his painting "The Tears of Kapaz." In 1962, Sattar was traveling with his artist friends Tahir Salahov and Togrul Narimanbeyov. They stopped in Ganja to see Goygol and Kapaz. (Kapaz is a nearby mountain. In the 12th century, a strong earthquake in the region created a cascade of lakes, including Goygol and Maralgol.)Kapaz was very misty the day that they happened to be there and Sattar was quite impatient to see the sun rise behind the mountain. The following morning, he witnessed the sun rising while the moon was still shining down from the other side of the mountain. The scene impressed him so much that after they returned to Baku, he tried to recreate his emotions by painting the scene.Another work, "The Wish of the Land," was inspired by a visit to Lake Jeyranbatan that same year. This lake supplied Baku with fresh water. Rumors were spreading that the lake was drying up, so Sattar decided to go there and have a look for himself. While walking around, he noticed a tiny flower growing out of the dry parched land. He sensed how much the flower was longing for that deserted land to become a flowery meadow. Back in his studio, he painted "The Wish of the Land." The work seems to say, "Where there is water, there must be beauty."As the founder of contemporary Azerbaijani landscape painting, Sattar loved to travel around the country exploring its beauty. Once he remarked, "I don't need to go to Tahiti like Gauguin. Others don't need to either. My inspiration comes from my own country and people."Many of his works depict specific areas of Azerbaijan. For instance, "Bazarduzu Outskirts" features Bazarduzu, the highest point of the Grand Caucasus Mountains. Other examples include "Old Shamakhi" and "Autumn in Nakhchivan." Each one tries to show the tension that exists between humanity and nature. But of all Azerbaijan, Sattar loved his native village Amirjan the most and had no desire to leave it. When he was allocated a two-room apartment in the "House of Painters" in Baku, he gave the apartment to his friend Tahir Salahov.Sattar was known for having several unique traits; one of them was his very long hair. It is said that he cut it only twice during his lifetime. The second time was in 1973, during a serious illness. The first time took place when Azerbaijani sculptor Fuad Abdurrahmanov decided to make a statue of Sattar. The artist suspected that Fuad was more infatuated with his long hair than with his personality, so he showed up in Fuad's studio having cut off his hair. Needless to say, Fuad was quite surprised. Today the white marble statue commemorating Sattar depicts him with short hair. The statue is on display at the National Art Museum.Sattar was also known for his generosity. He often gave his paintings away to people who admired them. Foreigners who came to Azerbaijan who were interested in art would usually visit Sattar's studio. (Though the officials disliked this, they couldn't go against the guests' wishes.) Once an Italian wanted to buy one of his works. Sattar decided to give the work to him instead. The Italian hesitated, "I can't accept such a valuable work without giving anything in return." Sattar answered, "I never give cheap presents." That put an end to the discussion.An exhibition of Sattar's works was held at the Prague National Gallery in 1964. After the exhibition, five of the works were selected for inclusion in the museum's permanent collection. Sattar refused to accept an honorarium for the works, offering them as presents to the Gallery. These stories of his generosity correspond to his simple lifestyle. He was known for not caring about material things like money, clothes or anything but the cheapest of cigarettes.Sattar won many prizes for his art. He received the title of Honored Art Worker of the Republic in 1960 and was named People's Artist in 1963. When he won the State Prize in 1972, however, he refused to accept it. When the prize money arrived at his home in Amirjan, he sent it back.He was upset because his efforts to meet with the Secretary of the Communist Party in Azerbaijan, Heydar Aliyev, had been unsuccessful. Sattar had wanted to tell him about the general problems of artists in Azerbaijan. Only when he threatened to move to Georgia did his friend Tahir Salahov manage to set up the desired meeting. (It would have been considered a scandal if an artist of Sattar's stature had left Azerbaijan.)When Tahir and Sattar arrived at the meeting, the Secretary for Cultural Affairs was there as well. He extended his hand to Sattar, who coldly refused it-a gesture of extraordinary disdain at the time. (The Secretary had been the one who prevented Sattar from being able to meet with Aliyev.) After a productive meeting with Aliyev, Sattar agreed to accept the State Prize money and again exhibit his works in Azerbaijan.In the 1970s, an important exhibition, "The Achievements of Soviet Azerbaijan," was to be held in Baku. One of the Full Members of the Politburo Fyodr Kulakov was to come from Moscow to attend the event. Well-known Azerbaijani artists were commissioned to decorate the hall.The government was supposed to supply the artists with materials to make the banners and coats of arms. Instead of natural silk, the artists were given artificial silk. It was impossible to paint because the colors wouldn't soak into the material. So the decorations looked awful.The day before the opening ceremony, the government officials arrived at the exhibition to give their official approval. Seeing the inferior quality of the decorations, they started blaming the artists, who remained silent for fear of losing their government commissions.Sattar was there among the artists even though he had not been invited to participate. He burst into anger and accused them for keeping silent. He told them that Stalin had killed Husein Javid [an outstanding poet], but Javid was not dead-he still lived in his poems. Sattar knew that even though the people in power still carried out Stalin's aims, they didn't have the power to kill like Stalin had had. Sattar urged the artists to stand up and explain what the real problem was.In 1973, Sattar fell extremely ill with a case of blood poisoning. Even though he received treatment at a hospital in Sabunchu [a district in Baku], he didn't recover. The head doctor of the hospital said that the only other option was for him to be treated in Moscow. But the officials didn't want to cover the financial expenses of such a trip, so Sattar's friends made arrangements to organize the trip for him. Gulmurad, who ran a local teahouse, took him to Moscow where he underwent the operation successfully.When Sattar passed away in 1974, he was not buried in the Avenue of the Honored Ones as might have been expected. Instead, according to his will, he was laid to rest in his native village of Amirjan, next to his mother's grave. The monument on his grave-a statue of Sattar standing and holding two empty picture frames-was made by Omar Eldarov. Today, a bronze bust of Sattar stands in front of the Amirjan Cultural House and a street in Baku takes his name as well.Sattar's legacy includes countless works that have been exhibited all over the world, including personal exhibitions in the U.S., England, Turkey and Russia. He also created around 30 sketch diaries that contain his reflections on life and art.----------------------------------Sattar Bahlulzade (15 December 1909 ⤠14 October 1974) was the founder of contemporary Azerbaijani landscape painting.He began his professional education at the National Art Institute in Baku (1927â¤1931). In 1933, he went to Moscow to continue his education in the Drawing Department at the Moscow Fine Arts Institute. There he studied in the studio of Vladimir Favorsky. During the summer workshops in Crimea, Russian painter Grigory Shegal saw some of Sattar's sketches and suggested that he transfer to the Institute's Painting Department. So he did.Though he experimented in various genres of art, his unique talent was landscape painting. At first, he used to paint nature realistically as he had been taught. But soon he developed his own style to express the emotional feeling it invoked in him. This new style was more surreal and cosmic. In fact, some of his paintings are reminiscent of photos of the earth taken from space. Using a combination of pastel colors and bold strokes, he made nature look more colorful and lively, and sometimes even more fantastic, than it did in reality.Sattar loved to travel around his country ⤠Azerbaijan ⤠exploring its beauty. Once he remarked, "I don't need to go to Tahiti like Gauguin. My inspiration comes from my own country and people."Many of his works depict specific areas of Azerbaijan. For instance, "Bazarduzu Outskirts" features Bazarduzu, the highest point of the Grand Caucasus Mountains. Other examples include "Old Shamakhi" and "Autumn in Nakhchivan."Bahlulzade won many prizes for his art. He received the title of Honored Art Worker of the Republic of Azerbaijan in 1960 and was named People's Artist in 1963.In 1973, Sattar fell extremely ill with a case of blood poisoning. When Sattar died in 1974, he was not buried in the Avenue of the Honored Ones as might have been expected. Instead, according to his will, he was laid to rest in his native village of Amirjan (Azerbaijan), next to his mother's grave.Sattar's legacy includes countless works that have been exhibited all over the world, including personal exhibitions in the U.S., England, Turkey and Russia. He also created around 30 sketch diaries that contain his reflections on life and art.Most of his works are exhibited in museums all over Azerbaijan, particularly in the cities like Baku, Ganja and Nakhchivan. Some of his most brilliant works are: Gudialchay valley (1953), Evening above Caspian Sea (1959), Spring of my Native Land (1967)., 2.5, Toronto, Ontario: Toronto:, ON McClelland & Stewart / M&S, 1982, 1st Canadian Edition, First Printing, 1982. -----------hardcover, a solid Very Good example, foxing to the edges of the text block, bookplate on the verso of the front board from John & Gisela Sommer who were well known lovers of art and THE ARTS in georgetown Ontario, ---in an attractive Good price clipped dustjacket with some light wear and tear and shallow chipping, ---"In Michael Ondaatjes beloved family memoir, fact and fiction blur to create a dazzlingly original portrait of a lost time and place. Ondaatje left Ceylon (now Sri Lanka) at the age of eleven. Almost twenty-five years later, he returned to sort out the recollected fragments of experience, legend, and family scandal, and to reconstruct the carefree, doomed life his parents and grandparents had led in a place where couples danced the tango in the moonlight, where drink, gambling, and romance were the main occupations of the upper class. Rich with eccentric characters and captivating stories, and set against the exotic landscape of a colonial empire in decline, Running in the Family is Ondaatjes unforgettable journey through memory and imagination to reclaim his past."---, any image directly beside this listing is the actual book and not a generic photo ///NOT SIGNED ---GUARANTEED to be AVAILABLE///. First Edition. Hard Cover. Very Good (see description)/Good (see description). Illus. by Photo Cover. 5.75w x 8.5h Inches. Price Clipped Jacket., Toronto:, ON McClelland & Stewart / M&S, 1982, 1st Canadian Edition, First Printing, 1982, 2.75, UK,slim,landscape 12mo wraps,no dw/dj,as issued,1st edn. [1971,published end of 1970 for Christmas market.] NFINE.No owner inscrptn and no price-clip (6/-,30p.).Bright,crisp,clean, sharp-cornered,glossy laminated,wrap-around colour pictorial artwork by GILES,illustrated card covers with white letters - virtually scoring+indentation free.Top+fore-edges very lightly toned; contents bright,tight,clean,solid and sound - near pristine - no dog-ear reading creases to any pages' corners - appears unread - apart from my own collation.No reading creases to spine and no crease at front spine's gutter's edge. UK,slim,landscape 12mo wraps,1st edn,128pp [unpaginated] includes title-page,intro by Michael Bentine,with his b/w portrait photograph and his facsimile signature,profuse b/w topical cartoons.Cover scene: Canal bank fishing scene with several assorted characters fishing with rod and line to front and approaching at speed,an inflatable dinghy with an outboard motor,being steered by Stinker,dragging a trawl net filling up with fish and Ernie in the dinghy's bow blowing a horn. Other earlier and later GILES annuals are available,please enquire. Carl 'GILES' - known just by his surname worldwide,had been the regular cartoonist for the 'Daily Express' (a UK tabloid, newspaper) in London,from about the middle of WW2.Since 1946 (the first annual comprising several years works up to issue No.6,this being the first to feature a single year), collections of his much detailed and imaginative cartoons,in book form,have appeared both annually and regularly,with compilations even appearing after his death.The cartoons are based on a 'family unit' - from babies to Grandma and the many relatives in between.The humorous punchlines to the cartoons were usually topical and reflected British humour,but it's the plethora of visual jokes and puns within the cartoon, thereby ensuring an enduring appeal to collectors of his works. Within each annual there's an extra attraction of the celebrity introductions to each annual.A collection of witty and humorous,detailed and imaginative cartoons by one of Britain's best-known and loved cartoonists.Giles died 07/08/1995. Since April 2013,and again in March 2015,and in this year too,the UK Post Office has altered it's Pricing in Proportion template,altering its prices,weight allowances,dimensions and lowered its qualifying compensation rates too! So,please contact rpaxtonden@blueyonder.co.uk,because of the lighter weight and the value of this item,for correct shipping/ P+p quotes - particularly ALL overseas buyers - BEFORE ordering through the order page!, LONDON.BEAVERBROOK NEWSPAPERS LTD.,[1971,published end of 1970 for Christmas market.], 0, UK,slim,landscape 12mo wraps,no dw/dj,as issued,1st edn. [1973,published end of 1972 for Christmas market.] NFINE.No owner inscrptn and no price-clip (38p).Bright,crisp,clean,sharp-cornered,glossy laminated,wrap-around colour pictorial artwork by GILES,illustrated card covers with white letters - virtually scoring+indent free - but with 4 varying lengths laminate wrinkles to front cover and an accidental,small diagonal corner crease to rear lower corner.Top+fore-edges very lightly toned; contents bright,tight,clean,solid and sound - near pristine - no dog-ear reading creases to any pages' corners - appears unread - apart from my own collation.No reading creases to spine and no crease at front spine's gutter's edge.UK,slim, landscape 12mo wraps,1st edn,128pp [unpaginated] includes title-page,intro by Dave Allen,with his b/w portrait photograph and his facsimile signature,profuse b/w topical cartoons.Cover scene: Front cover with suitor on knees offering a ring,in front of a girl sat on a sofa,shielding her eyes from bright lights from siblings' camera crew with cameras and lights etc,filming the scene to rear cover. Other earlier and later GILES annuals are available,please enquire. Carl 'GILES' - known just by his surname worldwide,had been the regular cartoonist for the 'Daily Express' (a UK tabloid, newspaper) in London,from about the middle of WW2.Since 1946 (the first annual comprising several years works up to issue No.6,this being the first to feature a single year), collections of his much detailed and imaginative cartoons,in book form,have appeared both annually and regularly,with compilations even appearing after his death.The cartoons are based on a 'family unit' - from babies to Grandma and the many relatives in between.The humorous punchlines to the cartoons were usually topical and reflected British humour,but it's the plethora of visual jokes and puns within the cartoon, thereby ensuring an enduring appeal to collectors of his works. Within each annual there's an extra attraction of the celebrity introductions to each annual.A collection of witty and humorous,detailed and imaginative cartoons by one of Britain's best-known and loved cartoonists.Giles died 07/08/1995. Since April 2013,and again in March 2015,and in this year too, the UK Post Office has altered it's Pricing in Proportion template,altering its prices,weight allowances,dimensions and lowered its qualifying compensation rates too! So,please contact rpaxtonden@blueyonder.co.uk,because of the lighter weight of this item,for correct shipping/P+p quotes - particularly ALL overseas buyers - BEFORE ordering through the order page!, LONDON.BEAVERBROOK NEWSPAPERS LTD.,1973., 4, UK,slim,landscape 12mo wraps,no dw/dj,as issued,1st edn. [1976,published end of 1975 for Christmas market.] FINE.No owner inscrptn and no price-clip (60p).Bright,crisp,clean,sharp-cornered,glossy laminated,wrap-around colour pictorial artwork by GILES,illustrated card covers with white letters - virtually scoring+indent free.Several laminate wrinkles - definitely NOT creases - to front cover.Top+fore-edges very lightly toned; contents bright,tight,clean,solid and sound - pristine - no dog-ear reading creases to any pages' corners - appears unread - apart from my own collation.No reading creases to spine.UK,slim,landscape 12mo wraps,1st edn,128pp [unpaginated] includes title-page,intro by Tommy Cooper,with his b/w portrait photograph and his facsimile signature,profuse b/w topical cartoons.Cover scene: Grandma sat in chair,on a blanket on the beach /riverside,knitting and two children in rubber dinghy with an outboard motor,which Stinker is about to start,and Ernie tying an attached rope from Grandma's beach blanket with the intention of taking her water-skiing. Other earlier and later GILES annuals are available,please enquire.Giles died 07/08/1995. Carl 'GILES' - known just by his surname worldwide,had been the regular cartoonist for the 'Daily Express' (a UK tabloid, newspaper) in London,from about the middle of WW2.Since 1946 (the first annual comprising several years works up to issue No.6,this being the first to feature a single year), collections of his much detailed and imaginative cartoons,in book form,have appeared both annually and regularly,with compilations even appearing after his death.The cartoons are based on a 'family unit' - from babies to Grandma and the many relatives in between.The humorous punchlines to the cartoons were usually topical and reflected British humour,but it's the plethora of visual jokes and puns within the cartoon, thereby ensuring an enduring appeal to collectors of his works. Within each annual there's an extra attraction of the celebrity introductions to each annual.A collection of witty and humorous,detailed and imaginative cartoons by one of Britain's best-known and loved cartoonists. Since April 2013,and again in March 2015,and in this year too, the UK Post Office has altered it's Pricing in Proportion template,altering its prices,weight allowances,dimensions and lowered its qualifying compensation rates too! So,please contact rpaxtonden@blueyonder.co.uk,because of the lighter weight of this item,for correct shipping/P+p quotes - particularly ALL overseas buyers - BEFORE ordering through the order page!, LONDON.BEAVERBROOK NEWSPAPERS LTD.,c1976., 5, UK,slim,landscape 12mo wraps,no dw/dj,as issued,1st edn. [1975,published end of 1974 for Christmas market.] FINE.No owner inscrptn,no price-clip (50p.).Bright,crisp,clean,sharp-cornered,glossy laminated,wrap-around colour pictorial artwork by GILES,illustrated card covers with white letters - virtually scoring+indent free.Top+fore-edges very slightly aged/toned; contents bright,tight,clean,solid and sound - near pristine - no dog-ear reading creases to any pages' corners - appears unread - apart from my own collation.No reading creases to spine.UK,slim,landscape 12mo wraps,1st edn,128pp [unpaginated] includes title-page,intro by Mike Yarwood,with his b/w portrait photograph and his facsimile signature,profuse b/w topical cartoons.Cover scene: Residential street scene with shopkeeper and Grandma watching street's kids passing to each other and aound the back of the shop to the front again, grocer/fruiterer's produce - Stinker initiating the chain. Other earlier and later GILES annuals are available,please enquire.Giles died 07/08/1995. Carl 'GILES' - known just by his surname worldwide,had been the regular cartoonist for the 'Daily Express' (a UK tabloid, newspaper) in London,from about the middle of WW2.Since 1946 (the first annual comprising several years works up to issue No.6,this being the first to feature a single year), collections of his much detailed and imaginative cartoons,in book form,have appeared both annually and regularly,with compilations even appearing after his death.The cartoons are based on a 'family unit' - from babies to Grandma and the many relatives in between.The humorous punchlines to the cartoons were usually topical and reflected British humour,but it's the plethora of visual jokes and puns within the cartoon, thereby ensuring an enduring appeal to collectors of his works. Within each annual there's an extra attraction of the celebrity introductions to each annual.A collection of witty and humorous,detailed and imaginative cartoons by one of Britain's best-known and loved cartoonists. Since April 2013,and again in March 2015,and in this year too,the UK Post Office has altered it's Pricing in Proportion template,altering its prices,weight allowances,dimensions and lowered its qualifying compensation rates too! So,please contact rpaxtonden@blueyonder.co.uk,because of the lighter weight of this item,for correct shipping/P+p quotes - particularly ALL overseas buyers - BEFORE ordering through the order page!, LONDON.BEAVERBROOK NEWSPAPERS LTD.,c1975., 5, Good. Ships From Canada. New. No dust jacket as issued. Trade paperback (US). Glued binding. 301 p. Audience: General/trade. From School Library Journal YA This updated edition describes advances in photographic equipment and techniques in use since the first edition six years ago. There is information on the newest cameras, on new film speeds, darkroom techniques and the latest accessories. The basics of photography are all here, too. Illustrations with informative captions help in the study of photographing people, action, nature, landscapes, still life, architecture, as well as photojournalism, underwater photography, taking photos in inclement weather and using special effects. Of the 500 full-color photographs, the nature pictures are especially outstanding. A labeled picture of a darkroom is an effective opener for the information on processing and making prints of both color and black-and-white film. Basic printing controls and creative darkroom effects include step-by-step instructio, 2.5, Englewood, Colorado, U.S.A.: Westcliffe Pub, 1995 Book. Illus. by Photography By Netherton, John. Near Fine. Hardcover. 1st Edition. 11 1/4h x 10 1/2w. A first edition, 1st printing. Near fine, clean and solid green cloth cover boards. No wear or markings. Dust jacket fine. A nice large 128 page hard cover book loaded with beautiful color photographs of Tennessee's mountains, plateau, highland rim, central basin and our wetlands. Done by professional nature photographer John Netherton. A stunning look at the state's natural heritage, landscape of the trees in autumn to the flowers in bloom in spring, to the many waterfalls and mountain peaks, the sunset mirrored in Reelfoot Lake, also some photos of our wildlife. Commemorating Tennessee's 200 years of statehood.., Westcliffe Pub, 1995, 4<
usa, u.. | Biblio.co.uk Arundel Books of Seattle, Worldwide Collectibles, Leonard Shoup, R. J. A. PAXTON-DENNY., R. J. A. PAXTON-DENNY., R. J. A. PAXTON-DENNY., R. J. A. PAXTON-DENNY., Golden Bridge Books, Warren's Books Shipping costs: EUR 17.40 Details... |
1995, ISBN: 9781565791268
Paperback, Hardcover
Sattar Bahlulzadeh (Sattar Bahlulzade) Art BookMinistry of Culture and Tourism of the Republic of Azerbaijan - Sattar Bahlulzade's home museum.text is in RussianPaperback6.7 x 8.5 inchesS… More...
Sattar Bahlulzadeh (Sattar Bahlulzade) Art BookMinistry of Culture and Tourism of the Republic of Azerbaijan - Sattar Bahlulzade's home museum.text is in RussianPaperback6.7 x 8.5 inchesSattar Bahlulzade (1909-1974)Sattar Bahlulzade was known for his unpredictability, but no one anticipated such a volatile reaction to criticism. The occasion was the opening of a new exhibition at the Baku Art Museum. Sattar had submitted one of his paintings-a view of the sea-but the work had been rejected. One of the organizing committee members told him that he had "misinterpreted" nature and that his painting needed more work."You people paint landscapes without even leaving your studios," Sattar shot back. "You just copy from postcards and photographs. I don't think you even know what nature looks like!" Suddenly, he kicked his painting, damaging it, and stomped off.This confrontation, which happened in the 1950s, illustrates Sattar's passion to create art on his own terms. As one of the first Azerbaijani artists to break away from the government-mandated style of Social Realism, he is known for developing his own unique style of painting landscapes. Though he passed away 25 years ago, his 90th Jubilee will be celebrated this year in Baku.Sattar began his professional education at the National Art Institute in Baku (1927-1931). Then he worked with Azim Azimzade at the newspaper called "Communist" for the following two years. In 1933, acting on Azimzade's advice, he went to Moscow to continue his education in the Drawing Department at the Moscow Fine Arts Institute. There he studied in the studio of V.A. Favorsky. During the summer workshops in Crimea, Russian painter Marc Chagall saw some of Sattar's sketches and suggested that he transfer to the Institute's Painting Department. So he did.In 1940, Sattar worked on "Babak's Revolt" as his final project. (Babak refers to the 7th-century figure who is considered a great hero in the region because he led a resistance against the Arabic invasion. Eventually he was captured and executed.) Even though Sattar exhibited this work, he didn't have a chance to defend his diploma because World War II broke out in 1941 and he had to remain in Baku. After the war was over, he received several invitations from Moscow to return to defend his diploma, but he never did. "Does an artist need a diploma to prove his worth?" he asked.Most of Sattar's life and creative activity were spent in Amirjan, a village about half an hour's drive east of Baku near the sea. Like the character of Majnun in the Eastern legend of "Leyli and Majnun," Sattar spent most of his time outdoors in nature, rarely going into the city or seeing his friends and family. Majnun wandered throughout nature because he was lovesick; Sattar was trying to grasp nature's beauty and capture it on canvas. He never married and didn't have much of a personal life, but those who close to him got used to his eccentricities.Though he experimented in various genres of art, his unique talent was landscape painting. At first, he used to paint nature realistically as he had been taught. But soon he developed his own style to express the emotional feeling it invoked in him. This new style was more surreal and cosmic-in fact, some of his paintings are reminiscent of photos of the earth taken from space. Using a combination of pastel colors and bold strokes, he made nature look more colorful and lively, and sometimes even more fantastic, than it did in reality.Sattar's ability to closely observe things enabled him to create subtle, sophisticated renderings of nature. He would gain delight from the bits of beauty that were expressed in stones, trees and flowers-a scene that might seem quite ordinary to other people. He would then transfer his delight onto canvas so that others could enjoy it as well.One such experience gave birth to his painting "The Tears of Kapaz." In 1962, Sattar was traveling with his artist friends Tahir Salahov and Togrul Narimanbeyov. They stopped in Ganja to see Goygol and Kapaz. (Kapaz is a nearby mountain. In the 12th century, a strong earthquake in the region created a cascade of lakes, including Goygol and Maralgol.)Kapaz was very misty the day that they happened to be there and Sattar was quite impatient to see the sun rise behind the mountain. The following morning, he witnessed the sun rising while the moon was still shining down from the other side of the mountain. The scene impressed him so much that after they returned to Baku, he tried to recreate his emotions by painting the scene.Another work, "The Wish of the Land," was inspired by a visit to Lake Jeyranbatan that same year. This lake supplied Baku with fresh water. Rumors were spreading that the lake was drying up, so Sattar decided to go there and have a look for himself. While walking around, he noticed a tiny flower growing out of the dry parched land. He sensed how much the flower was longing for that deserted land to become a flowery meadow. Back in his studio, he painted "The Wish of the Land." The work seems to say, "Where there is water, there must be beauty."As the founder of contemporary Azerbaijani landscape painting, Sattar loved to travel around the country exploring its beauty. Once he remarked, "I don't need to go to Tahiti like Gauguin. Others don't need to either. My inspiration comes from my own country and people."Many of his works depict specific areas of Azerbaijan. For instance, "Bazarduzu Outskirts" features Bazarduzu, the highest point of the Grand Caucasus Mountains. Other examples include "Old Shamakhi" and "Autumn in Nakhchivan." Each one tries to show the tension that exists between humanity and nature. But of all Azerbaijan, Sattar loved his native village Amirjan the most and had no desire to leave it. When he was allocated a two-room apartment in the "House of Painters" in Baku, he gave the apartment to his friend Tahir Salahov.Sattar was known for having several unique traits; one of them was his very long hair. It is said that he cut it only twice during his lifetime. The second time was in 1973, during a serious illness. The first time took place when Azerbaijani sculptor Fuad Abdurrahmanov decided to make a statue of Sattar. The artist suspected that Fuad was more infatuated with his long hair than with his personality, so he showed up in Fuad's studio having cut off his hair. Needless to say, Fuad was quite surprised. Today the white marble statue commemorating Sattar depicts him with short hair. The statue is on display at the National Art Museum.Sattar was also known for his generosity. He often gave his paintings away to people who admired them. Foreigners who came to Azerbaijan who were interested in art would usually visit Sattar's studio. (Though the officials disliked this, they couldn't go against the guests' wishes.) Once an Italian wanted to buy one of his works. Sattar decided to give the work to him instead. The Italian hesitated, "I can't accept such a valuable work without giving anything in return." Sattar answered, "I never give cheap presents." That put an end to the discussion.An exhibition of Sattar's works was held at the Prague National Gallery in 1964. After the exhibition, five of the works were selected for inclusion in the museum's permanent collection. Sattar refused to accept an honorarium for the works, offering them as presents to the Gallery. These stories of his generosity correspond to his simple lifestyle. He was known for not caring about material things like money, clothes or anything but the cheapest of cigarettes.Sattar won many prizes for his art. He received the title of Honored Art Worker of the Republic in 1960 and was named People's Artist in 1963. When he won the State Prize in 1972, however, he refused to accept it. When the prize money arrived at his home in Amirjan, he sent it back.He was upset because his efforts to meet with the Secretary of the Communist Party in Azerbaijan, Heydar Aliyev, had been unsuccessful. Sattar had wanted to tell him about the general problems of artists in Azerbaijan. Only when he threatened to move to Georgia did his friend Tahir Salahov manage to set up the desired meeting. (It would have been considered a scandal if an artist of Sattar's stature had left Azerbaijan.)When Tahir and Sattar arrived at the meeting, the Secretary for Cultural Affairs was there as well. He extended his hand to Sattar, who coldly refused it-a gesture of extraordinary disdain at the time. (The Secretary had been the one who prevented Sattar from being able to meet with Aliyev.) After a productive meeting with Aliyev, Sattar agreed to accept the State Prize money and again exhibit his works in Azerbaijan.In the 1970s, an important exhibition, "The Achievements of Soviet Azerbaijan," was to be held in Baku. One of the Full Members of the Politburo Fyodr Kulakov was to come from Moscow to attend the event. Well-known Azerbaijani artists were commissioned to decorate the hall.The government was supposed to supply the artists with materials to make the banners and coats of arms. Instead of natural silk, the artists were given artificial silk. It was impossible to paint because the colors wouldn't soak into the material. So the decorations looked awful.The day before the opening ceremony, the government officials arrived at the exhibition to give their official approval. Seeing the inferior quality of the decorations, they started blaming the artists, who remained silent for fear of losing their government commissions.Sattar was there among the artists even though he had not been invited to participate. He burst into anger and accused them for keeping silent. He told them that Stalin had killed Husein Javid [an outstanding poet], but Javid was not dead-he still lived in his poems. Sattar knew that even though the people in power still carried out Stalin's aims, they didn't have the power to kill like Stalin had had. Sattar urged the artists to stand up and explain what the real problem was.In 1973, Sattar fell extremely ill with a case of blood poisoning. Even though he received treatment at a hospital in Sabunchu [a district in Baku], he didn't recover. The head doctor of the hospital said that the only other option was for him to be treated in Moscow. But the officials didn't want to cover the financial expenses of such a trip, so Sattar's friends made arrangements to organize the trip for him. Gulmurad, who ran a local teahouse, took him to Moscow where he underwent the operation successfully.When Sattar passed away in 1974, he was not buried in the Avenue of the Honored Ones as might have been expected. Instead, according to his will, he was laid to rest in his native village of Amirjan, next to his mother's grave. The monument on his grave-a statue of Sattar standing and holding two empty picture frames-was made by Omar Eldarov. Today, a bronze bust of Sattar stands in front of the Amirjan Cultural House and a street in Baku takes his name as well.Sattar's legacy includes countless works that have been exhibited all over the world, including personal exhibitions in the U.S., England, Turkey and Russia. He also created around 30 sketch diaries that contain his reflections on life and art.----------------------------------Sattar Bahlulzade (15 December 1909 14 October 1974) was the founder of contemporary Azerbaijani landscape painting.He began his professional education at the National Art Institute in Baku (19271931). In 1933, he went to Moscow to continue his education in the Drawing Department at the Moscow Fine Arts Institute. There he studied in the studio of Vladimir Favorsky. During the summer workshops in Crimea, Russian painter Grigory Shegal saw some of Sattar's sketches and suggested that he transfer to the Institute's Painting Department. So he did.Though he experimented in various genres of art, his unique talent was landscape painting. At first, he used to paint nature realistically as he had been taught. But soon he developed his own style to express the emotional feeling it invoked in him. This new style was more surreal and cosmic. In fact, some of his paintings are reminiscent of photos of the earth taken from space. Using a combination of pastel colors and bold strokes, he made nature look more colorful and lively, and sometimes even more fantastic, than it did in reality.Sattar loved to travel around his country Azerbaijan exploring its beauty. Once he remarked, "I don't need to go to Tahiti like Gauguin. My inspiration comes from my own country and people."Many of his works depict specific areas of Azerbaijan. For instance, "Bazarduzu Outskirts" features Bazarduzu, the highest point of the Grand Caucasus Mountains. Other examples include "Old Shamakhi" and "Autumn in Nakhchivan."Bahlulzade won many prizes for his art. He received the title of Honored Art Worker of the Republic of Azerbaijan in 1960 and was named People's Artist in 1963.In 1973, Sattar fell extremely ill with a case of blood poisoning. When Sattar died in 1974, he was not buried in the Avenue of the Honored Ones as might have been expected. Instead, according to his will, he was laid to rest in his native village of Amirjan (Azerbaijan), next to his mother's grave.Sattar's legacy includes countless works that have been exhibited all over the world, including personal exhibitions in the U.S., England, Turkey and Russia. He also created around 30 sketch diaries that contain his reflections on life and art.Most of his works are exhibited in museums all over Azerbaijan, particularly in the cities like Baku, Ganja and Nakhchivan. Some of his most brilliant works are: Gudialchay valley (1953), Evening above Caspian Sea (1959), Spring of my Native Land (1967)., 2.5, W. H. Allen, 1967. First Edition. Hardcover. Very Good. 8vo - over 7¾" - 9¾" Tall (small thin). A very good copy in very good dust jacket with slight rubbing and scuffing to jacket; minor bumping to jacket edges; slight bumping to cloth spine tips; previous owner's stamp and ink name on front free endpaper. v, [3], 278 pages + plates. First part of the author's journals; includes coverage of the author's first trip to Europe, college years and memories of the First World War. Ramsey, page 75 (US sheets). 22 b/w Photographs / Plates (chiefly portraits)., W. H. Allen, 1967, 3, Good. Ships From Canada. New. No dust jacket as issued. Trade paperback (US). Glued binding. 301 p. Audience: General/trade. From School Library Journal YA This updated edition describes advances in photographic equipment and techniques in use since the first edition six years ago. There is information on the newest cameras, on new film speeds, darkroom techniques and the latest accessories. The basics of photography are all here, too. Illustrations with informative captions help in the study of photographing people, action, nature, landscapes, still life, architecture, as well as photojournalism, underwater photography, taking photos in inclement weather and using special effects. Of the 500 full-color photographs, the nature pictures are especially outstanding. A labeled picture of a darkroom is an effective opener for the information on processing and making prints of both color and black-and-white film. Basic printing controls and creative darkroom effects include step-by-step instructio, 2.5, Englewood, Colorado, U.S.A.: Westcliffe Pub, 1995 Book. Illus. by Photography By Netherton, John. Near Fine. Hardcover. 1st Edition. 11 1/4h x 10 1/2w. A first edition, 1st printing. Near fine, clean and solid green cloth cover boards. No wear or markings. Dust jacket fine. A nice large 128 page hard cover book loaded with beautiful color photographs of Tennessee's mountains, plateau, highland rim, central basin and our wetlands. Done by professional nature photographer John Netherton. A stunning look at the state's natural heritage, landscape of the trees in autumn to the flowers in bloom in spring, to the many waterfalls and mountain peaks, the sunset mirrored in Reelfoot Lake, also some photos of our wildlife. Commemorating Tennessee's 200 years of statehood.., Westcliffe Pub, 1995, 4<
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1995, ISBN: 9781565791268
Hardcover, First edition
Used - Good. Former Library book. Shows some signs of wear, and may have some markings on the inside., 2.5, Cumberland Valley Press. Used - Good. Shows some signs of wear, and may have… More...
Used - Good. Former Library book. Shows some signs of wear, and may have some markings on the inside., 2.5, Cumberland Valley Press. Used - Good. Shows some signs of wear, and may have some markings on the inside., Cumberland Valley Press, 2.5, Cumberland Valley Press. Used - Good. Shows some signs of wear, and may have some markings on the inside., Cumberland Valley Press, 2.5, Used - Good. Former Library book. Shows some signs of wear, and may have some markings on the inside., 2.5, Used - Good. Shows some signs of wear, and may have some markings on the inside., 2.5, Westcliffe Pub, 1995. 1st Edition. Hardcover. Very Good/Near Fine. Copiously illustrated. Tight, clean. DJ shows minor scratches. Inscribed by Netherton to his parents., Westcliffe Pub, 1995, 3.5<
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1995, ISBN: 1565791266
Hardcover
[EAN: 9781565791268], Gebraucht, sehr guter Zustand, [PU: Westcliffe Publishers, Englewood, Colorado, U.S.A.], TENNESSEE, PHOTOGRAPHY, SIGNED, Jacket, VERY GOOD HARDCOVER/SIGNED BY AUTHOR… More...
[EAN: 9781565791268], Gebraucht, sehr guter Zustand, [PU: Westcliffe Publishers, Englewood, Colorado, U.S.A.], TENNESSEE, PHOTOGRAPHY, SIGNED, Jacket, VERY GOOD HARDCOVER/SIGNED BY AUTHOR. Teal cloth in red pictorial jacket, 128 pp. Jacket has a three inch tear on the back, front board very slightly bowed, interior clean, tight, bright and unmarked. A photo history of Tennessee. A nice copy. This is a large book and International orders will require additional postage; Size: 10 x 11", Books<
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1995, ISBN: 9781565791268
Hardcover
Englewood, Colorado, U.S.A.: Westcliffe Publishers, 1995. VERY GOOD HARDCOVER/SIGNED BY AUTHOR. Teal cloth in red pictorial jacket, 128 pp. Jacket has a three inch tear on the back, fro… More...
Englewood, Colorado, U.S.A.: Westcliffe Publishers, 1995. VERY GOOD HARDCOVER/SIGNED BY AUTHOR. Teal cloth in red pictorial jacket, 128 pp. Jacket has a three inch tear on the back, front board very slightly bowed, interior clean, tight, bright and unmarked. A photo history of Tennessee. A nice copy. This is a large book and International orders will require additional postage;. Signed by Author. First American Edition. Hard Cover. Very Good/Very Good. 10 x 11"., Westcliffe Publishers, 1995, 3<
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2015, ISBN: 9781565791268
Paperback, Hardcover
W. H. Allen, 1967. First Edition. Hardcover. Very Good. 8vo - over 7¾" - 9¾" Tall (small thin). A very good copy in very good dust jacket with slight rubbing and scuffing to jacket; m… More...
W. H. Allen, 1967. First Edition. Hardcover. Very Good. 8vo - over 7¾" - 9¾" Tall (small thin). A very good copy in very good dust jacket with slight rubbing and scuffing to jacket; minor bumping to jacket edges; slight bumping to cloth spine tips; previous owner's stamp and ink name on front free endpaper. v, [3], 278 pages + plates. First part of the author's journals; includes coverage of the author's first trip to Europe, college years and memories of the First World War. Ramsey, page 75 (US sheets). 22 b/w Photographs / Plates (chiefly portraits)., W. H. Allen, 1967, 3, Sattar Bahlulzadeh (Sattar Bahlulzade) Art BookMinistry of Culture and Tourism of the Republic of Azerbaijan - Sattar Bahlulzade's home museum.text is in RussianPaperback6.7 x 8.5 inchesSattar Bahlulzade (1909-1974)Sattar Bahlulzade was known for his unpredictability, but no one anticipated such a volatile reaction to criticism. The occasion was the opening of a new exhibition at the Baku Art Museum. Sattar had submitted one of his paintings-a view of the sea-but the work had been rejected. One of the organizing committee members told him that he had "misinterpreted" nature and that his painting needed more work."You people paint landscapes without even leaving your studios," Sattar shot back. "You just copy from postcards and photographs. I don't think you even know what nature looks like!" Suddenly, he kicked his painting, damaging it, and stomped off.This confrontation, which happened in the 1950s, illustrates Sattar's passion to create art on his own terms. As one of the first Azerbaijani artists to break away from the government-mandated style of Social Realism, he is known for developing his own unique style of painting landscapes. Though he passed away 25 years ago, his 90th Jubilee will be celebrated this year in Baku.Sattar began his professional education at the National Art Institute in Baku (1927-1931). Then he worked with Azim Azimzade at the newspaper called "Communist" for the following two years. In 1933, acting on Azimzade's advice, he went to Moscow to continue his education in the Drawing Department at the Moscow Fine Arts Institute. There he studied in the studio of V.A. Favorsky. During the summer workshops in Crimea, Russian painter Marc Chagall saw some of Sattar's sketches and suggested that he transfer to the Institute's Painting Department. So he did.In 1940, Sattar worked on "Babak's Revolt" as his final project. (Babak refers to the 7th-century figure who is considered a great hero in the region because he led a resistance against the Arabic invasion. Eventually he was captured and executed.) Even though Sattar exhibited this work, he didn't have a chance to defend his diploma because World War II broke out in 1941 and he had to remain in Baku. After the war was over, he received several invitations from Moscow to return to defend his diploma, but he never did. "Does an artist need a diploma to prove his worth?" he asked.Most of Sattar's life and creative activity were spent in Amirjan, a village about half an hour's drive east of Baku near the sea. Like the character of Majnun in the Eastern legend of "Leyli and Majnun," Sattar spent most of his time outdoors in nature, rarely going into the city or seeing his friends and family. Majnun wandered throughout nature because he was lovesick; Sattar was trying to grasp nature's beauty and capture it on canvas. He never married and didn't have much of a personal life, but those who close to him got used to his eccentricities.Though he experimented in various genres of art, his unique talent was landscape painting. At first, he used to paint nature realistically as he had been taught. But soon he developed his own style to express the emotional feeling it invoked in him. This new style was more surreal and cosmic-in fact, some of his paintings are reminiscent of photos of the earth taken from space. Using a combination of pastel colors and bold strokes, he made nature look more colorful and lively, and sometimes even more fantastic, than it did in reality.Sattar's ability to closely observe things enabled him to create subtle, sophisticated renderings of nature. He would gain delight from the bits of beauty that were expressed in stones, trees and flowers-a scene that might seem quite ordinary to other people. He would then transfer his delight onto canvas so that others could enjoy it as well.One such experience gave birth to his painting "The Tears of Kapaz." In 1962, Sattar was traveling with his artist friends Tahir Salahov and Togrul Narimanbeyov. They stopped in Ganja to see Goygol and Kapaz. (Kapaz is a nearby mountain. In the 12th century, a strong earthquake in the region created a cascade of lakes, including Goygol and Maralgol.)Kapaz was very misty the day that they happened to be there and Sattar was quite impatient to see the sun rise behind the mountain. The following morning, he witnessed the sun rising while the moon was still shining down from the other side of the mountain. The scene impressed him so much that after they returned to Baku, he tried to recreate his emotions by painting the scene.Another work, "The Wish of the Land," was inspired by a visit to Lake Jeyranbatan that same year. This lake supplied Baku with fresh water. Rumors were spreading that the lake was drying up, so Sattar decided to go there and have a look for himself. While walking around, he noticed a tiny flower growing out of the dry parched land. He sensed how much the flower was longing for that deserted land to become a flowery meadow. Back in his studio, he painted "The Wish of the Land." The work seems to say, "Where there is water, there must be beauty."As the founder of contemporary Azerbaijani landscape painting, Sattar loved to travel around the country exploring its beauty. Once he remarked, "I don't need to go to Tahiti like Gauguin. Others don't need to either. My inspiration comes from my own country and people."Many of his works depict specific areas of Azerbaijan. For instance, "Bazarduzu Outskirts" features Bazarduzu, the highest point of the Grand Caucasus Mountains. Other examples include "Old Shamakhi" and "Autumn in Nakhchivan." Each one tries to show the tension that exists between humanity and nature. But of all Azerbaijan, Sattar loved his native village Amirjan the most and had no desire to leave it. When he was allocated a two-room apartment in the "House of Painters" in Baku, he gave the apartment to his friend Tahir Salahov.Sattar was known for having several unique traits; one of them was his very long hair. It is said that he cut it only twice during his lifetime. The second time was in 1973, during a serious illness. The first time took place when Azerbaijani sculptor Fuad Abdurrahmanov decided to make a statue of Sattar. The artist suspected that Fuad was more infatuated with his long hair than with his personality, so he showed up in Fuad's studio having cut off his hair. Needless to say, Fuad was quite surprised. Today the white marble statue commemorating Sattar depicts him with short hair. The statue is on display at the National Art Museum.Sattar was also known for his generosity. He often gave his paintings away to people who admired them. Foreigners who came to Azerbaijan who were interested in art would usually visit Sattar's studio. (Though the officials disliked this, they couldn't go against the guests' wishes.) Once an Italian wanted to buy one of his works. Sattar decided to give the work to him instead. The Italian hesitated, "I can't accept such a valuable work without giving anything in return." Sattar answered, "I never give cheap presents." That put an end to the discussion.An exhibition of Sattar's works was held at the Prague National Gallery in 1964. After the exhibition, five of the works were selected for inclusion in the museum's permanent collection. Sattar refused to accept an honorarium for the works, offering them as presents to the Gallery. These stories of his generosity correspond to his simple lifestyle. He was known for not caring about material things like money, clothes or anything but the cheapest of cigarettes.Sattar won many prizes for his art. He received the title of Honored Art Worker of the Republic in 1960 and was named People's Artist in 1963. When he won the State Prize in 1972, however, he refused to accept it. When the prize money arrived at his home in Amirjan, he sent it back.He was upset because his efforts to meet with the Secretary of the Communist Party in Azerbaijan, Heydar Aliyev, had been unsuccessful. Sattar had wanted to tell him about the general problems of artists in Azerbaijan. Only when he threatened to move to Georgia did his friend Tahir Salahov manage to set up the desired meeting. (It would have been considered a scandal if an artist of Sattar's stature had left Azerbaijan.)When Tahir and Sattar arrived at the meeting, the Secretary for Cultural Affairs was there as well. He extended his hand to Sattar, who coldly refused it-a gesture of extraordinary disdain at the time. (The Secretary had been the one who prevented Sattar from being able to meet with Aliyev.) After a productive meeting with Aliyev, Sattar agreed to accept the State Prize money and again exhibit his works in Azerbaijan.In the 1970s, an important exhibition, "The Achievements of Soviet Azerbaijan," was to be held in Baku. One of the Full Members of the Politburo Fyodr Kulakov was to come from Moscow to attend the event. Well-known Azerbaijani artists were commissioned to decorate the hall.The government was supposed to supply the artists with materials to make the banners and coats of arms. Instead of natural silk, the artists were given artificial silk. It was impossible to paint because the colors wouldn't soak into the material. So the decorations looked awful.The day before the opening ceremony, the government officials arrived at the exhibition to give their official approval. Seeing the inferior quality of the decorations, they started blaming the artists, who remained silent for fear of losing their government commissions.Sattar was there among the artists even though he had not been invited to participate. He burst into anger and accused them for keeping silent. He told them that Stalin had killed Husein Javid [an outstanding poet], but Javid was not dead-he still lived in his poems. Sattar knew that even though the people in power still carried out Stalin's aims, they didn't have the power to kill like Stalin had had. Sattar urged the artists to stand up and explain what the real problem was.In 1973, Sattar fell extremely ill with a case of blood poisoning. Even though he received treatment at a hospital in Sabunchu [a district in Baku], he didn't recover. The head doctor of the hospital said that the only other option was for him to be treated in Moscow. But the officials didn't want to cover the financial expenses of such a trip, so Sattar's friends made arrangements to organize the trip for him. Gulmurad, who ran a local teahouse, took him to Moscow where he underwent the operation successfully.When Sattar passed away in 1974, he was not buried in the Avenue of the Honored Ones as might have been expected. Instead, according to his will, he was laid to rest in his native village of Amirjan, next to his mother's grave. The monument on his grave-a statue of Sattar standing and holding two empty picture frames-was made by Omar Eldarov. Today, a bronze bust of Sattar stands in front of the Amirjan Cultural House and a street in Baku takes his name as well.Sattar's legacy includes countless works that have been exhibited all over the world, including personal exhibitions in the U.S., England, Turkey and Russia. He also created around 30 sketch diaries that contain his reflections on life and art.----------------------------------Sattar Bahlulzade (15 December 1909 ⤠14 October 1974) was the founder of contemporary Azerbaijani landscape painting.He began his professional education at the National Art Institute in Baku (1927â¤1931). In 1933, he went to Moscow to continue his education in the Drawing Department at the Moscow Fine Arts Institute. There he studied in the studio of Vladimir Favorsky. During the summer workshops in Crimea, Russian painter Grigory Shegal saw some of Sattar's sketches and suggested that he transfer to the Institute's Painting Department. So he did.Though he experimented in various genres of art, his unique talent was landscape painting. At first, he used to paint nature realistically as he had been taught. But soon he developed his own style to express the emotional feeling it invoked in him. This new style was more surreal and cosmic. In fact, some of his paintings are reminiscent of photos of the earth taken from space. Using a combination of pastel colors and bold strokes, he made nature look more colorful and lively, and sometimes even more fantastic, than it did in reality.Sattar loved to travel around his country ⤠Azerbaijan ⤠exploring its beauty. Once he remarked, "I don't need to go to Tahiti like Gauguin. My inspiration comes from my own country and people."Many of his works depict specific areas of Azerbaijan. For instance, "Bazarduzu Outskirts" features Bazarduzu, the highest point of the Grand Caucasus Mountains. Other examples include "Old Shamakhi" and "Autumn in Nakhchivan."Bahlulzade won many prizes for his art. He received the title of Honored Art Worker of the Republic of Azerbaijan in 1960 and was named People's Artist in 1963.In 1973, Sattar fell extremely ill with a case of blood poisoning. When Sattar died in 1974, he was not buried in the Avenue of the Honored Ones as might have been expected. Instead, according to his will, he was laid to rest in his native village of Amirjan (Azerbaijan), next to his mother's grave.Sattar's legacy includes countless works that have been exhibited all over the world, including personal exhibitions in the U.S., England, Turkey and Russia. He also created around 30 sketch diaries that contain his reflections on life and art.Most of his works are exhibited in museums all over Azerbaijan, particularly in the cities like Baku, Ganja and Nakhchivan. Some of his most brilliant works are: Gudialchay valley (1953), Evening above Caspian Sea (1959), Spring of my Native Land (1967)., 2.5, Toronto, Ontario: Toronto:, ON McClelland & Stewart / M&S, 1982, 1st Canadian Edition, First Printing, 1982. -----------hardcover, a solid Very Good example, foxing to the edges of the text block, bookplate on the verso of the front board from John & Gisela Sommer who were well known lovers of art and THE ARTS in georgetown Ontario, ---in an attractive Good price clipped dustjacket with some light wear and tear and shallow chipping, ---"In Michael Ondaatjes beloved family memoir, fact and fiction blur to create a dazzlingly original portrait of a lost time and place. Ondaatje left Ceylon (now Sri Lanka) at the age of eleven. Almost twenty-five years later, he returned to sort out the recollected fragments of experience, legend, and family scandal, and to reconstruct the carefree, doomed life his parents and grandparents had led in a place where couples danced the tango in the moonlight, where drink, gambling, and romance were the main occupations of the upper class. Rich with eccentric characters and captivating stories, and set against the exotic landscape of a colonial empire in decline, Running in the Family is Ondaatjes unforgettable journey through memory and imagination to reclaim his past."---, any image directly beside this listing is the actual book and not a generic photo ///NOT SIGNED ---GUARANTEED to be AVAILABLE///. First Edition. Hard Cover. Very Good (see description)/Good (see description). Illus. by Photo Cover. 5.75w x 8.5h Inches. Price Clipped Jacket., Toronto:, ON McClelland & Stewart / M&S, 1982, 1st Canadian Edition, First Printing, 1982, 2.75, UK,slim,landscape 12mo wraps,no dw/dj,as issued,1st edn. [1971,published end of 1970 for Christmas market.] NFINE.No owner inscrptn and no price-clip (6/-,30p.).Bright,crisp,clean, sharp-cornered,glossy laminated,wrap-around colour pictorial artwork by GILES,illustrated card covers with white letters - virtually scoring+indentation free.Top+fore-edges very lightly toned; contents bright,tight,clean,solid and sound - near pristine - no dog-ear reading creases to any pages' corners - appears unread - apart from my own collation.No reading creases to spine and no crease at front spine's gutter's edge. UK,slim,landscape 12mo wraps,1st edn,128pp [unpaginated] includes title-page,intro by Michael Bentine,with his b/w portrait photograph and his facsimile signature,profuse b/w topical cartoons.Cover scene: Canal bank fishing scene with several assorted characters fishing with rod and line to front and approaching at speed,an inflatable dinghy with an outboard motor,being steered by Stinker,dragging a trawl net filling up with fish and Ernie in the dinghy's bow blowing a horn. Other earlier and later GILES annuals are available,please enquire. Carl 'GILES' - known just by his surname worldwide,had been the regular cartoonist for the 'Daily Express' (a UK tabloid, newspaper) in London,from about the middle of WW2.Since 1946 (the first annual comprising several years works up to issue No.6,this being the first to feature a single year), collections of his much detailed and imaginative cartoons,in book form,have appeared both annually and regularly,with compilations even appearing after his death.The cartoons are based on a 'family unit' - from babies to Grandma and the many relatives in between.The humorous punchlines to the cartoons were usually topical and reflected British humour,but it's the plethora of visual jokes and puns within the cartoon, thereby ensuring an enduring appeal to collectors of his works. Within each annual there's an extra attraction of the celebrity introductions to each annual.A collection of witty and humorous,detailed and imaginative cartoons by one of Britain's best-known and loved cartoonists.Giles died 07/08/1995. Since April 2013,and again in March 2015,and in this year too,the UK Post Office has altered it's Pricing in Proportion template,altering its prices,weight allowances,dimensions and lowered its qualifying compensation rates too! So,please contact rpaxtonden@blueyonder.co.uk,because of the lighter weight and the value of this item,for correct shipping/ P+p quotes - particularly ALL overseas buyers - BEFORE ordering through the order page!, LONDON.BEAVERBROOK NEWSPAPERS LTD.,[1971,published end of 1970 for Christmas market.], 0, UK,slim,landscape 12mo wraps,no dw/dj,as issued,1st edn. [1973,published end of 1972 for Christmas market.] NFINE.No owner inscrptn and no price-clip (38p).Bright,crisp,clean,sharp-cornered,glossy laminated,wrap-around colour pictorial artwork by GILES,illustrated card covers with white letters - virtually scoring+indent free - but with 4 varying lengths laminate wrinkles to front cover and an accidental,small diagonal corner crease to rear lower corner.Top+fore-edges very lightly toned; contents bright,tight,clean,solid and sound - near pristine - no dog-ear reading creases to any pages' corners - appears unread - apart from my own collation.No reading creases to spine and no crease at front spine's gutter's edge.UK,slim, landscape 12mo wraps,1st edn,128pp [unpaginated] includes title-page,intro by Dave Allen,with his b/w portrait photograph and his facsimile signature,profuse b/w topical cartoons.Cover scene: Front cover with suitor on knees offering a ring,in front of a girl sat on a sofa,shielding her eyes from bright lights from siblings' camera crew with cameras and lights etc,filming the scene to rear cover. Other earlier and later GILES annuals are available,please enquire. Carl 'GILES' - known just by his surname worldwide,had been the regular cartoonist for the 'Daily Express' (a UK tabloid, newspaper) in London,from about the middle of WW2.Since 1946 (the first annual comprising several years works up to issue No.6,this being the first to feature a single year), collections of his much detailed and imaginative cartoons,in book form,have appeared both annually and regularly,with compilations even appearing after his death.The cartoons are based on a 'family unit' - from babies to Grandma and the many relatives in between.The humorous punchlines to the cartoons were usually topical and reflected British humour,but it's the plethora of visual jokes and puns within the cartoon, thereby ensuring an enduring appeal to collectors of his works. Within each annual there's an extra attraction of the celebrity introductions to each annual.A collection of witty and humorous,detailed and imaginative cartoons by one of Britain's best-known and loved cartoonists.Giles died 07/08/1995. Since April 2013,and again in March 2015,and in this year too, the UK Post Office has altered it's Pricing in Proportion template,altering its prices,weight allowances,dimensions and lowered its qualifying compensation rates too! So,please contact rpaxtonden@blueyonder.co.uk,because of the lighter weight of this item,for correct shipping/P+p quotes - particularly ALL overseas buyers - BEFORE ordering through the order page!, LONDON.BEAVERBROOK NEWSPAPERS LTD.,1973., 4, UK,slim,landscape 12mo wraps,no dw/dj,as issued,1st edn. [1976,published end of 1975 for Christmas market.] FINE.No owner inscrptn and no price-clip (60p).Bright,crisp,clean,sharp-cornered,glossy laminated,wrap-around colour pictorial artwork by GILES,illustrated card covers with white letters - virtually scoring+indent free.Several laminate wrinkles - definitely NOT creases - to front cover.Top+fore-edges very lightly toned; contents bright,tight,clean,solid and sound - pristine - no dog-ear reading creases to any pages' corners - appears unread - apart from my own collation.No reading creases to spine.UK,slim,landscape 12mo wraps,1st edn,128pp [unpaginated] includes title-page,intro by Tommy Cooper,with his b/w portrait photograph and his facsimile signature,profuse b/w topical cartoons.Cover scene: Grandma sat in chair,on a blanket on the beach /riverside,knitting and two children in rubber dinghy with an outboard motor,which Stinker is about to start,and Ernie tying an attached rope from Grandma's beach blanket with the intention of taking her water-skiing. Other earlier and later GILES annuals are available,please enquire.Giles died 07/08/1995. Carl 'GILES' - known just by his surname worldwide,had been the regular cartoonist for the 'Daily Express' (a UK tabloid, newspaper) in London,from about the middle of WW2.Since 1946 (the first annual comprising several years works up to issue No.6,this being the first to feature a single year), collections of his much detailed and imaginative cartoons,in book form,have appeared both annually and regularly,with compilations even appearing after his death.The cartoons are based on a 'family unit' - from babies to Grandma and the many relatives in between.The humorous punchlines to the cartoons were usually topical and reflected British humour,but it's the plethora of visual jokes and puns within the cartoon, thereby ensuring an enduring appeal to collectors of his works. Within each annual there's an extra attraction of the celebrity introductions to each annual.A collection of witty and humorous,detailed and imaginative cartoons by one of Britain's best-known and loved cartoonists. Since April 2013,and again in March 2015,and in this year too, the UK Post Office has altered it's Pricing in Proportion template,altering its prices,weight allowances,dimensions and lowered its qualifying compensation rates too! So,please contact rpaxtonden@blueyonder.co.uk,because of the lighter weight of this item,for correct shipping/P+p quotes - particularly ALL overseas buyers - BEFORE ordering through the order page!, LONDON.BEAVERBROOK NEWSPAPERS LTD.,c1976., 5, UK,slim,landscape 12mo wraps,no dw/dj,as issued,1st edn. [1975,published end of 1974 for Christmas market.] FINE.No owner inscrptn,no price-clip (50p.).Bright,crisp,clean,sharp-cornered,glossy laminated,wrap-around colour pictorial artwork by GILES,illustrated card covers with white letters - virtually scoring+indent free.Top+fore-edges very slightly aged/toned; contents bright,tight,clean,solid and sound - near pristine - no dog-ear reading creases to any pages' corners - appears unread - apart from my own collation.No reading creases to spine.UK,slim,landscape 12mo wraps,1st edn,128pp [unpaginated] includes title-page,intro by Mike Yarwood,with his b/w portrait photograph and his facsimile signature,profuse b/w topical cartoons.Cover scene: Residential street scene with shopkeeper and Grandma watching street's kids passing to each other and aound the back of the shop to the front again, grocer/fruiterer's produce - Stinker initiating the chain. Other earlier and later GILES annuals are available,please enquire.Giles died 07/08/1995. Carl 'GILES' - known just by his surname worldwide,had been the regular cartoonist for the 'Daily Express' (a UK tabloid, newspaper) in London,from about the middle of WW2.Since 1946 (the first annual comprising several years works up to issue No.6,this being the first to feature a single year), collections of his much detailed and imaginative cartoons,in book form,have appeared both annually and regularly,with compilations even appearing after his death.The cartoons are based on a 'family unit' - from babies to Grandma and the many relatives in between.The humorous punchlines to the cartoons were usually topical and reflected British humour,but it's the plethora of visual jokes and puns within the cartoon, thereby ensuring an enduring appeal to collectors of his works. Within each annual there's an extra attraction of the celebrity introductions to each annual.A collection of witty and humorous,detailed and imaginative cartoons by one of Britain's best-known and loved cartoonists. Since April 2013,and again in March 2015,and in this year too,the UK Post Office has altered it's Pricing in Proportion template,altering its prices,weight allowances,dimensions and lowered its qualifying compensation rates too! So,please contact rpaxtonden@blueyonder.co.uk,because of the lighter weight of this item,for correct shipping/P+p quotes - particularly ALL overseas buyers - BEFORE ordering through the order page!, LONDON.BEAVERBROOK NEWSPAPERS LTD.,c1975., 5, Good. Ships From Canada. New. No dust jacket as issued. Trade paperback (US). Glued binding. 301 p. Audience: General/trade. From School Library Journal YA This updated edition describes advances in photographic equipment and techniques in use since the first edition six years ago. There is information on the newest cameras, on new film speeds, darkroom techniques and the latest accessories. The basics of photography are all here, too. Illustrations with informative captions help in the study of photographing people, action, nature, landscapes, still life, architecture, as well as photojournalism, underwater photography, taking photos in inclement weather and using special effects. Of the 500 full-color photographs, the nature pictures are especially outstanding. A labeled picture of a darkroom is an effective opener for the information on processing and making prints of both color and black-and-white film. Basic printing controls and creative darkroom effects include step-by-step instructio, 2.5, Englewood, Colorado, U.S.A.: Westcliffe Pub, 1995 Book. Illus. by Photography By Netherton, John. Near Fine. Hardcover. 1st Edition. 11 1/4h x 10 1/2w. A first edition, 1st printing. Near fine, clean and solid green cloth cover boards. No wear or markings. Dust jacket fine. A nice large 128 page hard cover book loaded with beautiful color photographs of Tennessee's mountains, plateau, highland rim, central basin and our wetlands. Done by professional nature photographer John Netherton. A stunning look at the state's natural heritage, landscape of the trees in autumn to the flowers in bloom in spring, to the many waterfalls and mountain peaks, the sunset mirrored in Reelfoot Lake, also some photos of our wildlife. Commemorating Tennessee's 200 years of statehood.., Westcliffe Pub, 1995, 4<
1995, ISBN: 9781565791268
Paperback, Hardcover
Sattar Bahlulzadeh (Sattar Bahlulzade) Art BookMinistry of Culture and Tourism of the Republic of Azerbaijan - Sattar Bahlulzade's home museum.text is in RussianPaperback6.7 x 8.5 inchesS… More...
Sattar Bahlulzadeh (Sattar Bahlulzade) Art BookMinistry of Culture and Tourism of the Republic of Azerbaijan - Sattar Bahlulzade's home museum.text is in RussianPaperback6.7 x 8.5 inchesSattar Bahlulzade (1909-1974)Sattar Bahlulzade was known for his unpredictability, but no one anticipated such a volatile reaction to criticism. The occasion was the opening of a new exhibition at the Baku Art Museum. Sattar had submitted one of his paintings-a view of the sea-but the work had been rejected. One of the organizing committee members told him that he had "misinterpreted" nature and that his painting needed more work."You people paint landscapes without even leaving your studios," Sattar shot back. "You just copy from postcards and photographs. I don't think you even know what nature looks like!" Suddenly, he kicked his painting, damaging it, and stomped off.This confrontation, which happened in the 1950s, illustrates Sattar's passion to create art on his own terms. As one of the first Azerbaijani artists to break away from the government-mandated style of Social Realism, he is known for developing his own unique style of painting landscapes. Though he passed away 25 years ago, his 90th Jubilee will be celebrated this year in Baku.Sattar began his professional education at the National Art Institute in Baku (1927-1931). Then he worked with Azim Azimzade at the newspaper called "Communist" for the following two years. In 1933, acting on Azimzade's advice, he went to Moscow to continue his education in the Drawing Department at the Moscow Fine Arts Institute. There he studied in the studio of V.A. Favorsky. During the summer workshops in Crimea, Russian painter Marc Chagall saw some of Sattar's sketches and suggested that he transfer to the Institute's Painting Department. So he did.In 1940, Sattar worked on "Babak's Revolt" as his final project. (Babak refers to the 7th-century figure who is considered a great hero in the region because he led a resistance against the Arabic invasion. Eventually he was captured and executed.) Even though Sattar exhibited this work, he didn't have a chance to defend his diploma because World War II broke out in 1941 and he had to remain in Baku. After the war was over, he received several invitations from Moscow to return to defend his diploma, but he never did. "Does an artist need a diploma to prove his worth?" he asked.Most of Sattar's life and creative activity were spent in Amirjan, a village about half an hour's drive east of Baku near the sea. Like the character of Majnun in the Eastern legend of "Leyli and Majnun," Sattar spent most of his time outdoors in nature, rarely going into the city or seeing his friends and family. Majnun wandered throughout nature because he was lovesick; Sattar was trying to grasp nature's beauty and capture it on canvas. He never married and didn't have much of a personal life, but those who close to him got used to his eccentricities.Though he experimented in various genres of art, his unique talent was landscape painting. At first, he used to paint nature realistically as he had been taught. But soon he developed his own style to express the emotional feeling it invoked in him. This new style was more surreal and cosmic-in fact, some of his paintings are reminiscent of photos of the earth taken from space. Using a combination of pastel colors and bold strokes, he made nature look more colorful and lively, and sometimes even more fantastic, than it did in reality.Sattar's ability to closely observe things enabled him to create subtle, sophisticated renderings of nature. He would gain delight from the bits of beauty that were expressed in stones, trees and flowers-a scene that might seem quite ordinary to other people. He would then transfer his delight onto canvas so that others could enjoy it as well.One such experience gave birth to his painting "The Tears of Kapaz." In 1962, Sattar was traveling with his artist friends Tahir Salahov and Togrul Narimanbeyov. They stopped in Ganja to see Goygol and Kapaz. (Kapaz is a nearby mountain. In the 12th century, a strong earthquake in the region created a cascade of lakes, including Goygol and Maralgol.)Kapaz was very misty the day that they happened to be there and Sattar was quite impatient to see the sun rise behind the mountain. The following morning, he witnessed the sun rising while the moon was still shining down from the other side of the mountain. The scene impressed him so much that after they returned to Baku, he tried to recreate his emotions by painting the scene.Another work, "The Wish of the Land," was inspired by a visit to Lake Jeyranbatan that same year. This lake supplied Baku with fresh water. Rumors were spreading that the lake was drying up, so Sattar decided to go there and have a look for himself. While walking around, he noticed a tiny flower growing out of the dry parched land. He sensed how much the flower was longing for that deserted land to become a flowery meadow. Back in his studio, he painted "The Wish of the Land." The work seems to say, "Where there is water, there must be beauty."As the founder of contemporary Azerbaijani landscape painting, Sattar loved to travel around the country exploring its beauty. Once he remarked, "I don't need to go to Tahiti like Gauguin. Others don't need to either. My inspiration comes from my own country and people."Many of his works depict specific areas of Azerbaijan. For instance, "Bazarduzu Outskirts" features Bazarduzu, the highest point of the Grand Caucasus Mountains. Other examples include "Old Shamakhi" and "Autumn in Nakhchivan." Each one tries to show the tension that exists between humanity and nature. But of all Azerbaijan, Sattar loved his native village Amirjan the most and had no desire to leave it. When he was allocated a two-room apartment in the "House of Painters" in Baku, he gave the apartment to his friend Tahir Salahov.Sattar was known for having several unique traits; one of them was his very long hair. It is said that he cut it only twice during his lifetime. The second time was in 1973, during a serious illness. The first time took place when Azerbaijani sculptor Fuad Abdurrahmanov decided to make a statue of Sattar. The artist suspected that Fuad was more infatuated with his long hair than with his personality, so he showed up in Fuad's studio having cut off his hair. Needless to say, Fuad was quite surprised. Today the white marble statue commemorating Sattar depicts him with short hair. The statue is on display at the National Art Museum.Sattar was also known for his generosity. He often gave his paintings away to people who admired them. Foreigners who came to Azerbaijan who were interested in art would usually visit Sattar's studio. (Though the officials disliked this, they couldn't go against the guests' wishes.) Once an Italian wanted to buy one of his works. Sattar decided to give the work to him instead. The Italian hesitated, "I can't accept such a valuable work without giving anything in return." Sattar answered, "I never give cheap presents." That put an end to the discussion.An exhibition of Sattar's works was held at the Prague National Gallery in 1964. After the exhibition, five of the works were selected for inclusion in the museum's permanent collection. Sattar refused to accept an honorarium for the works, offering them as presents to the Gallery. These stories of his generosity correspond to his simple lifestyle. He was known for not caring about material things like money, clothes or anything but the cheapest of cigarettes.Sattar won many prizes for his art. He received the title of Honored Art Worker of the Republic in 1960 and was named People's Artist in 1963. When he won the State Prize in 1972, however, he refused to accept it. When the prize money arrived at his home in Amirjan, he sent it back.He was upset because his efforts to meet with the Secretary of the Communist Party in Azerbaijan, Heydar Aliyev, had been unsuccessful. Sattar had wanted to tell him about the general problems of artists in Azerbaijan. Only when he threatened to move to Georgia did his friend Tahir Salahov manage to set up the desired meeting. (It would have been considered a scandal if an artist of Sattar's stature had left Azerbaijan.)When Tahir and Sattar arrived at the meeting, the Secretary for Cultural Affairs was there as well. He extended his hand to Sattar, who coldly refused it-a gesture of extraordinary disdain at the time. (The Secretary had been the one who prevented Sattar from being able to meet with Aliyev.) After a productive meeting with Aliyev, Sattar agreed to accept the State Prize money and again exhibit his works in Azerbaijan.In the 1970s, an important exhibition, "The Achievements of Soviet Azerbaijan," was to be held in Baku. One of the Full Members of the Politburo Fyodr Kulakov was to come from Moscow to attend the event. Well-known Azerbaijani artists were commissioned to decorate the hall.The government was supposed to supply the artists with materials to make the banners and coats of arms. Instead of natural silk, the artists were given artificial silk. It was impossible to paint because the colors wouldn't soak into the material. So the decorations looked awful.The day before the opening ceremony, the government officials arrived at the exhibition to give their official approval. Seeing the inferior quality of the decorations, they started blaming the artists, who remained silent for fear of losing their government commissions.Sattar was there among the artists even though he had not been invited to participate. He burst into anger and accused them for keeping silent. He told them that Stalin had killed Husein Javid [an outstanding poet], but Javid was not dead-he still lived in his poems. Sattar knew that even though the people in power still carried out Stalin's aims, they didn't have the power to kill like Stalin had had. Sattar urged the artists to stand up and explain what the real problem was.In 1973, Sattar fell extremely ill with a case of blood poisoning. Even though he received treatment at a hospital in Sabunchu [a district in Baku], he didn't recover. The head doctor of the hospital said that the only other option was for him to be treated in Moscow. But the officials didn't want to cover the financial expenses of such a trip, so Sattar's friends made arrangements to organize the trip for him. Gulmurad, who ran a local teahouse, took him to Moscow where he underwent the operation successfully.When Sattar passed away in 1974, he was not buried in the Avenue of the Honored Ones as might have been expected. Instead, according to his will, he was laid to rest in his native village of Amirjan, next to his mother's grave. The monument on his grave-a statue of Sattar standing and holding two empty picture frames-was made by Omar Eldarov. Today, a bronze bust of Sattar stands in front of the Amirjan Cultural House and a street in Baku takes his name as well.Sattar's legacy includes countless works that have been exhibited all over the world, including personal exhibitions in the U.S., England, Turkey and Russia. He also created around 30 sketch diaries that contain his reflections on life and art.----------------------------------Sattar Bahlulzade (15 December 1909 14 October 1974) was the founder of contemporary Azerbaijani landscape painting.He began his professional education at the National Art Institute in Baku (19271931). In 1933, he went to Moscow to continue his education in the Drawing Department at the Moscow Fine Arts Institute. There he studied in the studio of Vladimir Favorsky. During the summer workshops in Crimea, Russian painter Grigory Shegal saw some of Sattar's sketches and suggested that he transfer to the Institute's Painting Department. So he did.Though he experimented in various genres of art, his unique talent was landscape painting. At first, he used to paint nature realistically as he had been taught. But soon he developed his own style to express the emotional feeling it invoked in him. This new style was more surreal and cosmic. In fact, some of his paintings are reminiscent of photos of the earth taken from space. Using a combination of pastel colors and bold strokes, he made nature look more colorful and lively, and sometimes even more fantastic, than it did in reality.Sattar loved to travel around his country Azerbaijan exploring its beauty. Once he remarked, "I don't need to go to Tahiti like Gauguin. My inspiration comes from my own country and people."Many of his works depict specific areas of Azerbaijan. For instance, "Bazarduzu Outskirts" features Bazarduzu, the highest point of the Grand Caucasus Mountains. Other examples include "Old Shamakhi" and "Autumn in Nakhchivan."Bahlulzade won many prizes for his art. He received the title of Honored Art Worker of the Republic of Azerbaijan in 1960 and was named People's Artist in 1963.In 1973, Sattar fell extremely ill with a case of blood poisoning. When Sattar died in 1974, he was not buried in the Avenue of the Honored Ones as might have been expected. Instead, according to his will, he was laid to rest in his native village of Amirjan (Azerbaijan), next to his mother's grave.Sattar's legacy includes countless works that have been exhibited all over the world, including personal exhibitions in the U.S., England, Turkey and Russia. He also created around 30 sketch diaries that contain his reflections on life and art.Most of his works are exhibited in museums all over Azerbaijan, particularly in the cities like Baku, Ganja and Nakhchivan. Some of his most brilliant works are: Gudialchay valley (1953), Evening above Caspian Sea (1959), Spring of my Native Land (1967)., 2.5, W. H. Allen, 1967. First Edition. Hardcover. Very Good. 8vo - over 7¾" - 9¾" Tall (small thin). A very good copy in very good dust jacket with slight rubbing and scuffing to jacket; minor bumping to jacket edges; slight bumping to cloth spine tips; previous owner's stamp and ink name on front free endpaper. v, [3], 278 pages + plates. First part of the author's journals; includes coverage of the author's first trip to Europe, college years and memories of the First World War. Ramsey, page 75 (US sheets). 22 b/w Photographs / Plates (chiefly portraits)., W. H. Allen, 1967, 3, Good. Ships From Canada. New. No dust jacket as issued. Trade paperback (US). Glued binding. 301 p. Audience: General/trade. From School Library Journal YA This updated edition describes advances in photographic equipment and techniques in use since the first edition six years ago. There is information on the newest cameras, on new film speeds, darkroom techniques and the latest accessories. The basics of photography are all here, too. Illustrations with informative captions help in the study of photographing people, action, nature, landscapes, still life, architecture, as well as photojournalism, underwater photography, taking photos in inclement weather and using special effects. Of the 500 full-color photographs, the nature pictures are especially outstanding. A labeled picture of a darkroom is an effective opener for the information on processing and making prints of both color and black-and-white film. Basic printing controls and creative darkroom effects include step-by-step instructio, 2.5, Englewood, Colorado, U.S.A.: Westcliffe Pub, 1995 Book. Illus. by Photography By Netherton, John. Near Fine. Hardcover. 1st Edition. 11 1/4h x 10 1/2w. A first edition, 1st printing. Near fine, clean and solid green cloth cover boards. No wear or markings. Dust jacket fine. A nice large 128 page hard cover book loaded with beautiful color photographs of Tennessee's mountains, plateau, highland rim, central basin and our wetlands. Done by professional nature photographer John Netherton. A stunning look at the state's natural heritage, landscape of the trees in autumn to the flowers in bloom in spring, to the many waterfalls and mountain peaks, the sunset mirrored in Reelfoot Lake, also some photos of our wildlife. Commemorating Tennessee's 200 years of statehood.., Westcliffe Pub, 1995, 4<
1995
ISBN: 9781565791268
Hardcover, First edition
Used - Good. Former Library book. Shows some signs of wear, and may have some markings on the inside., 2.5, Cumberland Valley Press. Used - Good. Shows some signs of wear, and may have… More...
Used - Good. Former Library book. Shows some signs of wear, and may have some markings on the inside., 2.5, Cumberland Valley Press. Used - Good. Shows some signs of wear, and may have some markings on the inside., Cumberland Valley Press, 2.5, Cumberland Valley Press. Used - Good. Shows some signs of wear, and may have some markings on the inside., Cumberland Valley Press, 2.5, Used - Good. Former Library book. Shows some signs of wear, and may have some markings on the inside., 2.5, Used - Good. Shows some signs of wear, and may have some markings on the inside., 2.5, Westcliffe Pub, 1995. 1st Edition. Hardcover. Very Good/Near Fine. Copiously illustrated. Tight, clean. DJ shows minor scratches. Inscribed by Netherton to his parents., Westcliffe Pub, 1995, 3.5<
1995, ISBN: 1565791266
Hardcover
[EAN: 9781565791268], Gebraucht, sehr guter Zustand, [PU: Westcliffe Publishers, Englewood, Colorado, U.S.A.], TENNESSEE, PHOTOGRAPHY, SIGNED, Jacket, VERY GOOD HARDCOVER/SIGNED BY AUTHOR… More...
[EAN: 9781565791268], Gebraucht, sehr guter Zustand, [PU: Westcliffe Publishers, Englewood, Colorado, U.S.A.], TENNESSEE, PHOTOGRAPHY, SIGNED, Jacket, VERY GOOD HARDCOVER/SIGNED BY AUTHOR. Teal cloth in red pictorial jacket, 128 pp. Jacket has a three inch tear on the back, front board very slightly bowed, interior clean, tight, bright and unmarked. A photo history of Tennessee. A nice copy. This is a large book and International orders will require additional postage; Size: 10 x 11", Books<
1995, ISBN: 9781565791268
Hardcover
Englewood, Colorado, U.S.A.: Westcliffe Publishers, 1995. VERY GOOD HARDCOVER/SIGNED BY AUTHOR. Teal cloth in red pictorial jacket, 128 pp. Jacket has a three inch tear on the back, fro… More...
Englewood, Colorado, U.S.A.: Westcliffe Publishers, 1995. VERY GOOD HARDCOVER/SIGNED BY AUTHOR. Teal cloth in red pictorial jacket, 128 pp. Jacket has a three inch tear on the back, front board very slightly bowed, interior clean, tight, bright and unmarked. A photo history of Tennessee. A nice copy. This is a large book and International orders will require additional postage;. Signed by Author. First American Edition. Hard Cover. Very Good/Very Good. 10 x 11"., Westcliffe Publishers, 1995, 3<
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Details of the book - Tennessee: A Bicentennial Celebration
EAN (ISBN-13): 9781565791268
ISBN (ISBN-10): 1565791266
Hardcover
Paperback
Publishing year: 1995
Publisher: Westcliffe Pub
Book in our database since 2007-10-10T15:21:44-04:00 (New York)
Detail page last modified on 2021-12-23T11:05:41-05:00 (New York)
ISBN/EAN: 1565791266
ISBN - alternate spelling:
1-56579-126-6, 978-1-56579-126-8
Alternate spelling and related search-keywords:
Book author: netherton
Book title: netherton
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