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Publicado por Centro de la Imagen, Mexico City, 1999
ISBN 10: 970181424XISBN 13: 9789701814246
Librería: Argosy Book Store, ABAA, ILAB, New York, NY, Estados Unidos de America
Libro
hardcover. Condición: very good(+). Estado de la sobrecubierta: very good(+). Mariana Yampolsky Ilustrador. English translations by Gabriel Bernal and Lisa Jane Heller Newman. Illustrated in color and black and white. 214 pages. Short 4to, blue boards, d.w. (spine lightly sunned, three small bumps at spine and upper edges). Mexico City: Centro de la Imagen, (1999). Uncommon. Three small bumps consisted with d.w., internally pristine. A very good(+) copy in a very good(+) dust wrapper.
Publicado por University of Texas Press, Austin, Texas, 1998
ISBN 10: 0292796048ISBN 13: 9780292796041
Librería: Treehorn Books, Santa Rosa, CA, Estados Unidos de America
Libro
Hardcover. Condición: Near Fine. Estado de la sobrecubierta: Near Fine. Wittliff Gallery Series; B and w photos; 10 X 0.75 X 8.75 inches; 128 pages.
Publicado por Fondo de Cultura Económica, 1985
ISBN 10: 9681619072ISBN 13: 9789681619077
Librería: A Book Preserve, Columbus, OH, Estados Unidos de America
Libro Original o primera edición
Soft cover. Condición: Near Fine. 1st Edition. Scarce. First Edition. VG+. 4to. 67 pp. [2] B/w photo plates on glossy page stock. Mainly studies of rural Mexico in the 1950s-60s. Essay by Elena Poniatowska. There is a bookplate tipped in on first page: "Devin Borden Hiram Butler", that refers to a well known gallery in Houston. Ships fast with tracking.
Publicado por University of Texas Press 1998, 1998
Librería: Hard to Find Books NZ (Internet) Ltd., Dunedin, OTAGO, Nueva Zelanda
Miembro de asociación: IOBA
Oblong Quarto, red heavy cloth boards, silver lettering to spine, blind stamped decoration to front, patterned eps, frontispiece, illus title page, 8 + 120pp, illus, Near FINE (v slight rubbing to page edges) in d/w VG+ (slight crinkling tom upper edge, slight rubbing to front and rear, v.slight ink staining to front).
Publicado por Editado por David Maawad
Librería: International Book Hunting, Manuel Alberti, BSAS, Argentina
Tlacotalpan - Yampolsky, Mariana; Poniatowska, Elena / Editado por David Maawad - , 2000 (155p) -- arte, buen estado --Fotografias color.
Publicado por University of Texas Press, 1998
ISBN 10: 0292796048ISBN 13: 9780292796041
Librería: Sequitur Books, Boonsboro, MD, Estados Unidos de America
Miembro de asociación: IOBA
Libro Ejemplar firmado
Hardcover. Condición: Like New. Signed underneath author/artists' photograph. Hardcover and dust jacket. Good binding and cover. Light wear. Clean, unmarked pages. "One of the most prominent and influential artists of Mexico, Mariana Yampolsky grew up surrounded by intellectual thought, socialist idealism, and an interest in global humanism. In 1952 she immigrated from Chicago to Mexico and became a part of the Taller de Grafica Popular, a cooperative workshop of painters and graphic artists dedicated to social and political ideas. She exhibited her printmaking work in collective exhibitions throughout the world from 1945 to 1958. Yampolsky's social responsibility and need to communicate the visual messages of artists to the public is seen in her expansive work as a graphic arts editor for school textbooks. Later in her career, she turned to photography and documented the complexity of Mexican culture, including its landscapes, folk art, and poverty. Her father, Oscar Yampolsky, a sculptor and painter, came from a progressive, multilingual, cosmopolitan but financially uncertain Russian Jewish family that had immigrated to the United States at the turn of the twentieth century because of antisemitic persecution. Her father met the woman who would become Mariana Yampolsky's mother on a study trip to Europe after he won the Prix de Rome. Mariana's mother was from an upper middle-class German Jewish family who immigrated to Brazil in the late 1930s to escape the Nazis. Her maternal uncle was Franz Boas (1858â 1942), considered to be the father of anthropology in the United States. While her first art medium in Mexico was printmaking, in 1948 she turned from engraving to photography. At San Carlos Academy, she studied with Lola Alvarez Bravo (1907â 1993), Manuel Alvarez Bravo (1902â 2002), the second wife of the noted Mexican photographer who, like her husband, was an exceptional Mexican photographer capturing the haunting duality of daily life in the country, where the past and present exist simultaneously. Lola Alvarez Bravo's photograph, From Generation to Generation (1950), depicts a mestizo woman with her white-shirted back to the viewer carrying her daughter in her arms. The photographer's mood and purpose are reflected years later in Yampolsky's photograph Apron (1988). Manuel Alvarez Bravo uncovers a regional pictorial vocabulary in the seemingly quiet, patient timelessness of Mexican/Indian figures. In his photographs there is a poetic sense of death, an anonymity of the people in ordinary activity, and the omnipresent weight of laborious work. Mariana Yampolsky's immigration to Mexico in 1945 occurred a year before the African American sculptor, Barbara Catlett (b. 1915), moved there. A sense of personal and political exploration, artistic identity and raised social consciousness regarding gender, racial and ethical issues appear as an impetus for these women artists' full integration into the Mexican cultural vanguard." - Jewish Woman's Archive This is an oversized or heavy book, which requires additional postage for international delivery outside the US. Signed.
Publicado por Biblioteca De Cultura Hidalguense, México, 1987
Librería: Librería Urbe, Ciudad de México, DF, México
Original o primera edición
Encuadernación de tapa blanda. Condición: Bien. Primera edición. 120p. 29cmx24cm. Cubiertas originales en tapa blanda, en buen estado. Texto por Elena Poniatowska. Fotografías en blanco y negro por Mariana Yampolsky. Primera edición limitada a 1000 ejemplares.
Publicado por Col. San Miguel Amantla,, 1980
Librería: Libros del Ayer ABA/ILAB, Santiago, Chile
Libro
Encuadernación de tapa blanda. Condición: Bien. México, Col. San Miguel Amantla, 1980. Rústica, 25 x 21 cms., 72 pp. Fotografías en B/n de Elena Poniatowska.