Stodgy university presses, in these hard economic times, have begun to produce books that have a broad appeal to scholars and casual readers alike, and The Texas Post Office Murals is a splendid example of the genre. Beautifully designed and printed, mostly in vivid color, Parisi\u27s book becomes both a superb tourist\u27s guide to 1930s art in Texas and a primary research document for students of American art and culture. Given the size of the state of Texas, he has also performed a valuable service by saving all of us a lot of dusty mileage along blue highways
Throughout much of the twentieth century, Texas literature, like that of other Great Plains states, ...
Karl Bodmer\u27s field sketches executed along the upper Missouri between 1832 and 1834 constitute o...
Review of: "When Tillage Begins, Other Arts Follow: Grant Wood and Christian Petersen Murals," by Le...
Stodgy university presses, in these hard economic times, have begun to produce books that have a bro...
This is a perfectly amazing little book-part toss-it-in-the-backseat tourist\u27s guide and part sch...
At its widest point, Texas measures some 850 miles across. EI Paso, in the extreme west, is closer t...
In an effort to outline the depth of the collections of the University of Oklahoma Fred Jones Jr. Mu...
That music has the power to captivate the human imagination and propel individuals into new areas of...
American western art is experiencing an astonishing resurgence in quantity and popularity. The Los A...
The advent of the real photographic postcard (RPPC) and the burgeoning growth in the early twentieth...
This is a coffee-table book about a two-parcel ranch in the Plains of the Texas Panhandle owned by b...
The upper West Texas area is a huge region of the southern Great Plains. Including the Rolling Plain...
This book is a tribute to the power of art, specifically, of the sculpture outside and inside the Ne...
In 2008, Jim Parsons and David Bush, staff members of the Greater Houston Preservation Alliance, pub...
Polly Smith showed her love for Texas through the lens of her Graflex camera. The photographs Smith ...
Throughout much of the twentieth century, Texas literature, like that of other Great Plains states, ...
Karl Bodmer\u27s field sketches executed along the upper Missouri between 1832 and 1834 constitute o...
Review of: "When Tillage Begins, Other Arts Follow: Grant Wood and Christian Petersen Murals," by Le...
Stodgy university presses, in these hard economic times, have begun to produce books that have a bro...
This is a perfectly amazing little book-part toss-it-in-the-backseat tourist\u27s guide and part sch...
At its widest point, Texas measures some 850 miles across. EI Paso, in the extreme west, is closer t...
In an effort to outline the depth of the collections of the University of Oklahoma Fred Jones Jr. Mu...
That music has the power to captivate the human imagination and propel individuals into new areas of...
American western art is experiencing an astonishing resurgence in quantity and popularity. The Los A...
The advent of the real photographic postcard (RPPC) and the burgeoning growth in the early twentieth...
This is a coffee-table book about a two-parcel ranch in the Plains of the Texas Panhandle owned by b...
The upper West Texas area is a huge region of the southern Great Plains. Including the Rolling Plain...
This book is a tribute to the power of art, specifically, of the sculpture outside and inside the Ne...
In 2008, Jim Parsons and David Bush, staff members of the Greater Houston Preservation Alliance, pub...
Polly Smith showed her love for Texas through the lens of her Graflex camera. The photographs Smith ...
Throughout much of the twentieth century, Texas literature, like that of other Great Plains states, ...
Karl Bodmer\u27s field sketches executed along the upper Missouri between 1832 and 1834 constitute o...
Review of: "When Tillage Begins, Other Arts Follow: Grant Wood and Christian Petersen Murals," by Le...