For five years, I’ve been sending out a Sunday email with brief comments on art that’s inspiring, thought-provoking, skillfully executed, and/or beautiful. Ayn Rand described art as emotional fuel. My goal-and my selfish pleasure!-is to help you find more of that fuel and use it more efficiently. How? By showing you wonderful art and provoking you to think about why you enjoy a particular piece … or don’t. This volume offers 172 recommendations, of which 54 were originally sent only to paid supporters. Among them are paintings, sculptures, architecture, decorative arts, music, film, TV shows, novels, dramas, short stories, poetry, and select works from museums and exhibitions.
Mục lục
Introduction
Testimonials
Part 1: Painting
Part 2: Sculpture
Part 3: Architecture
Part 4: Decorative Arts
Part 5: Museums & Exhibitions
Part 6: Music
Part 7: Movies & TV
Part 8: Novels
Part 9: Dramas
Part 10: Short Stories
Part 11: Poetry
Photo Credits
About the Editor
Giới thiệu về tác giả
At age five, I won my first writing award: a three-foot-long fire truck with an ear-splitting siren. I’ve been addicted to writing ever since. Today I’m an independent researcher, freelance writer, and lecturer. The challenge of figuring out how ideas and facts fit together, and then sharing what I know with others, clearly and concisely – that’s what makes me leap out of bed in the morning. Janson’s *History of Art*, lent to me by a high-school art teacher, was my first clue that art was more than the rock-star posters and garden gnomes that I saw in Catawissa, Pennsylvania, and that history wasn’t just a series of names, dates, and statistics. Soon afterwards I read Ayn Rand’s fiction and nonfiction works, and discovered that art and history – as well as politics, ethics, science, and all fields of human knowledge – are integrated by philosophy. My approach to studying art is based on Rand’s *The Romantic Manifesto*. (See my review of it on Amazon.) As an art historian I’m a passionate amateur, and I write for other passionate amateurs. I love looking at art, and thinking about art, and helping other people have a blast looking at it, too. *Outdoor Monuments of Manhattan: A Historical Guide* (New York University Press, 2007), which includes 54 sculptures, was described by Sam Roberts in the *New York Times* as ‘a perfect walking-tour accompaniment to help New Yorkers and visitors find, identify and better appreciate statues famous and obscure’ (1/28/2007). Every week I issue four art-related recommendations to my supporters, which have been collected in *Starry Solitudes* (poetry) and *Sunny Sundays* (painting, sculpture, architecture, literature, and more). In 2022 I published Timeline 1900-2021, whose subtitle sums up my fascination with history and culture: ‘Events Worldwide, US Politics & Culture, Economics, Science & Technology, Books, Visual Arts, Architecture, Film, TV, & Music.’ I’ve also published a series of books on Alexander Hamilton, most recently *Financial Programs of Alexander Hamilton.* My book on the Reynolds Affair earned me the designation ‘National Hamilton Advocate’ from the Alexander Hamilton Awareness Society. For a complete list of my writings, visit http://diannedurantewriter.com/books-essays.