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TIME: Almanac 1995
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<text id=90TT3396>
<title>
Dec. 17, 1990: Deck The Halls With Sumptuous Volumes
</title>
<history>
TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1990
Dec. 17, 1990 The Sleep Gap
</history>
<article>
<source>Time Magazine</source>
<hdr>
BOOKS, Page 86
Deck the Hall with Sumptuous Volumes
</hdr>
<body>
<p>From earrings to panthers to quilts, here is something for
everyone's shelf
</p>
<p> MASTERPIECES OF JAPANESE SCREEN PAINTING by Miyeko Murase
(Braziller; $150). The aphorism "Poetry is painting, painting is
mute poetry" is exemplified in these 37 exquisite screens painted
between the 15th and 19th centuries. A boldly abstract rendering
of blue irises from the Edo period is as striking and modern as a
Matisse cutout.
</p>
<p> THE ENCYCLOPEDIA OF BAD TASTE by Jane and Michael Stern
(HarperCollins; $29.99). If it weren't for bad taste, most people
wouldn't have any taste at all. That seems to be the thesis of
this arch and witty catalog of American kitsch. A sampler: Nehru
jackets, vanity license plates, bell-bottoms. The authors treat
their subject with affection and condescension; in other words,
they are tasteful about bad taste.
</p>
<p> SURVIVORS by James Balog (Abrams; $49.50). The Florida
panther and other endangered fauna are placed in the unaccustomed
atmosphere of a studio, where they sit for their portraits.
Suffused with an eerie light, they take on the dignity and
importance of icons and give the matter of survival a fresh
urgency and new focus.
</p>
<p> PAINTINGS IN THE HERMITAGE by Colin Eisler (Stewart, Tabori
& Chang; $85). Catherine the Great started it. She acquired
important paintings, and her collection became the nucleus of the
Leningrad museum. Velasquez, Rubens, Rembrandt, Van Gogh,
Picasso: no visitor has seen all that is pictured here; the book
itself amounts to a work of art.
</p>
<p> THE FAUVE LANDSCAPE by Judi Freeman (Abbeville; $65). From
1904 to 1908, a group of painters changed the history of modern
art. Their startling palettes and images are celebrated by an
authority who agrees with one of them, a painter named Henri
Matisse: "Fauve painting is not everything, but it is the
foundation of everything."
</p>
<p> AMISH: THE ART OF THE QUILT by Robert Hughes
(Knopf/Callaway; $100). These spare yet sumptuous squares reflect
the cardinal virtues of their Amish makers: simplicity and
practicality. Made between 1870 and 1950 in Lancaster County,
Pa., they foreshadowed the geometric art of the '60s and the
minimalism that followed. And unlike those paintings, they also
keep you warm at night.
</p>
<p> AFRICAN ARK by Carol Beckwith and Angela Fisher (Abrams;
$65). Ethiopia has suffered greatly in this century, but famine
and political upheaval have never dimmed its natural wonders and
social vibrance. Two photographers have brilliantly captured the
essence of the leopard-colored land, as well as the haunting
rites of people who still rock the cradle of mankind.
</p>
<p> EARRINGS by Daniela Mascetti and Amanda Triossi (Rizzoli;
$50). A glittering guide to the ornaments that women--and men--have been wearing since 3000 B.C., this book is dotted with
small gems: for example, because of the improvement of French
domestic candles in the 18th century, evening soirees increased,
and brilliant-cut, light-reflecting diamond earrings became de
rigueur.
</p>
<p> ART ACROSS AMERICA by William H. Gerdts (Abbeville; $425).
Only a handful of American artists have entered the national
consciousness, even though the country has always brimmed with
painters and sculptors. This huge, three-volume history
compensates for the neglect by celebrating the brushwork of some
800 gifted men and women. No greater revelation has been
published this year.
</p>
<p> THE STORY OF AMERICAN TOYS by Richard O'Brien (Abbeville;
$49.95). When the Pilgrims stepped ashore, they had toys in their
luggage. Americans have been playing with dolls, games and
miniatures ever since. This spirited volume gathers every
possible amusement for children from 19th century clay marbles to
Buck Rogers ray guns to effigies of Barbie, Ken and the Muppets.
</p>
<p> RUSSIAN DECORATIVE ARTS 1917-1937 by Vladimir Tolstoy
(Rizzoli; $125). The age of glasnost has lent a new interest to
book covers, posters, porcelains and costumes designed for mass
consumption in the pre-World War II Soviet Union. These well-made
souvenirs are about all that remain unbroken from a time that is
rapidly being swept into the dustbin of history.
</p>
<p> VENETIAN PALACES by Alvise Zorzi (Rizzoli; $95). The watery
avenues and grand facades of Venice are worth the price of
admission; inside, things grow more ostentatious with every step.
By the end, the reader is either totally surfeited with marble
and mosaics or ready to call a travel agent.</p>
</body>
</article>
</text>