Nonfiction » Art, Architecture, Photography » Artists

Film and Photography on the Front Range    by Tim Blevins
Price: $5.99 USD. 101950 words. Language: English. Published by Pikes Peak Library District on January 10, 2013. Nonfiction » Art, Architecture, Photography » Artists.

Film and Photography on the Front Range will acquaint the reader with the stories of many photographers of this Colorado region. From the earliest Rocky Mountain daguerreotypist in 1851, landscape pioneers, portraitists, silent filmmakers, theater commercial producers, fine arts photographers, to photojournalists, you will discover a picturesque history of Colorado image making.
Ken Kirkby. A Painter’s Quest for Canada    by Goody Niosi
Price: $5.50 USD. 122050 words. Language: English. Published by Libros Libertad Publishing  on December 4, 2011. Nonfiction » Art, Architecture, Photography » Artists.

When Ken Kirkby unveiled his painting, Isumataq in Parliament on March 28, 1992, he had to make do with a 25-foot model and the first four panels of the painting itself. The original, at 152' long and 12' high would not fit into the building. But even the model brought tears to the eyes of the 301 members of Parliament and senators gathered there.
L'affaire    by Alexandre Soljenitsyne
Price: $5.99 USD. 64290 words. Language: French. Published by Editions de  L'Herne  on February 14, 2011. Nonfiction » History » Contemporary political.

" L'affaire Soljenitsyne" rassemble l'ensemble des documents officiels concernant l'exclusion de Soljenitsyne de l'union des écrivains soviétiques en 1969.
The Divine Mistake    by Theresa Byrnes
Price: $4.99 USD. 106920 words. Language: English. Published on December 5, 2009. Nonfiction » Biography » Autobiographies & Memoirs.

From Sydney, then the Aboriginal community of Yirrkala, then South America, then New York, the artist Theresa Byrnes experiments with Iyengar yoga, acupuncture, psychic massage, tantric sex and even bondage. And while moving into a wheelchair on July 27, 1996, was “one of the saddest days in my life,” Byrnes later concedes the greater mobility “liberated me from my awkwardness.”