Books by "Robert Richard Pearce"

7 books found

Historic Camden: Nineteenth century

Historic Camden: Nineteenth century

by Thomas J. Kirkland, Robert MacMillan Kennedy

1926

History of Haitian Medicine

History of Haitian Medicine

by Robert Percival Parsons

1930

Peeps Into the Deaf World

Peeps Into the Deaf World

by William Robert Roe

1917

Three Minute Medicine

Three Minute Medicine

by Louis Robert Effler

1929

American Salons

American Salons

by Robert M. Crunden

1993 · Oxford University Press

In American Salons, Robert Crunden provides a sweeping account of the American encounter with European Modernism up to the American entry into World War I. Crunden begins with deft portraits of the figures who were central to the birth of Modernism, including James Whistler, the eccentric expatriate American painter who became the archetypal artist in his dress and behavior, and Henry and William James, who broke new ground in the genre of the novel and in psychology, influencing an international audience in a broad range of fields. At the heart of the book are the American salons--the intimate, personal gatherings of artists and intellectuals where Modernism flourished. In Chicago, Floyd Dell and Margery Currey spread new ideas to Sherwood Anderson, Theodore Dreiser, and others. In London, Ezra Pound could be found behind everything from the cigars of W. B. Yeats to the prose of Ford Madox Hueffer. In Paris, the salons of Leo and Gertrude Stein, and Michael and Sarah Stein, gave Picasso and Matisse their first secure audiences and incomes; meanwhile, Gertrude Stein produced a new writing style that had an incalculable impact on the generation of Ernest Hemingway. Most important of all were the salons of New York City. Alfred Stieglitz pioneered new forms of photography at the famous 291 Gallery. Mabel Dodge brought together modernist playwrights and painters, introducing them to political reformers and radicals. At the salon of Walter and Louise Arensberg, Marcel Duchamp and Francis Picabia rubbed shoulders with Wallace Stevens, Man Ray, and William Carlos Williams. By 1917, no art in America remained untouched by these new institutions. From the journalism of H. L. Mencken to the famous 1913 Armory Show in New York, Crunden illuminates this pivotal era, offering perceptive insights and evocative descriptions of the central personalities of Modernism.

Cripple Creek and Colorado Springs

Cripple Creek and Colorado Springs

by Henry Lee Jacques Warren, Robert Stride

1896