Search engine for discovering works of Art, research articles, and books related to Art and Culture
ShareThis
Javascript must be enabled to continue!

The high priestess

View through Open Library
Anselm Kiefer, Criticism and interpretation, December 31, 1989, Thames and Hudson in association with Anthony d'Offay Galley, London
Thames and Hudson in association with Anthony d'Offay Galley, London Thames and Hudson Ltd Meulenhoff/Landshoff in association with Anthony d'Offay Gallery, London
Title: The high priestess
Description:
Anselm Kiefer, Criticism and interpretation, December 31, 1989, Thames and Hudson in association with Anthony d'Offay Galley, London.

Related Results

The high priestess
The high priestess
Anselm Kiefer, Criticism and interpretation, 1989, Thames and Hudson, in association with Anthony d'Offay Gallery, London...
High density living
High density living
Rolf Jensen, Domestic Architecture, 1966, Leonard Hill...
Draper Touch : High Life High Style Dorhb
Draper Touch : High Life High Style Dorhb
VARNEY, Decoration and ornament, 2022, Antique Collectors' Club...
High-rise living
High-rise living
Andrew Weaving, Interior decoration, September 20, 2004, Gibbs Smith, Publisher...
High Art: Public Art on the High Line
High Art: Public Art on the High Line
Linda Yablonsky, Public art, May 05, 2015, Skira Rizzoli...
The High Renaissance
The High Renaissance
Murray, Linda., Renaissance Art, 1967-01-01, Frederick A. Phaeger...

Recent Results

Fire Risk in Traditional Villages of Sumba, Indonesia
Fire Risk in Traditional Villages of Sumba, Indonesia
Fire is a global problem for traditional villages, especially those dominated by the use of wood and thatch. These places are often crowded, which leads to the rapid spread of fire...
Indian Village, Adirondacks
Indian Village, Adirondacks
Verso is covered with old adhesive....
“When Life Becomes Art” -- on Hemans's “Image in Lava”
“When Life Becomes Art” -- on Hemans's “Image in Lava”
Felicia Hemans’s poetry is guided by an aesthetic of acute interestedness, but unlike most sentimental writers, Hemans treats feeling as something with epistemological value. This...

Back to Top