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Store Events - December 12, 2:00 p.m.
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Time: Saturday, December 12, 2009 2:00 p.m.
Title of Event: RICHARD CAHAN
RICHARD CAHAN signs Edgar Miller and the Hand-Made Home: Chicago's Forgotten Renaissance Man. Embracing old-world skills in a technological age, Edgar Miller was Chicago's last Renaissance artist. He was a fine painter, a master wood carver, and one of the nation's foremost stained glass designers. He could sculpt, draw hunting portraits, and was considered a pioneer in the use of graphic art in modern advertising. His artistic genius came together in four artistic studios he built on Chicago's north side in the 1920s and 1930s. He touched almost every inch of the studios with daring and surprise. He took rustic brick, crude stone, salvaged tile, found glass, steel, and wood, then "Edgarized" the homes with stained glass windows, frescos, murals, tile work, and wood carving. This collection contains over 400 images of the homes, which remarkably remain intact today. Come in for an autographed copy of this beautiful volume.
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Edgar Miller and the Handmade Home: Chicago's Forgotten Renaissance Man
by
Cahan, Richard,
Williams, Michael,
Vertikoff, Alexander
Format: Hardcover (Cloth)
Price:
$50.00
Published: Cityfiles Press, 2009
Inventory Status: Usually Ships in 1-5 days
Embracing old-world skills in a technological age, Edgar Miller was Chicago's last Renaissance artist. He was a fine painter, a master wood carver, and one of the nation's foremost stained glass designers. He could sculpt, draw hunting portraits, and was considered a pioneer in the use of graphic art in modern advertising. His artistic genius came together in four artistic studios he built on Chicago's north side in the 1920s and 1930s. He touched almost every inch of the studios with daring and surprise. He took rustic brick, crude stone, salvaged tile, found glass, steel, and wood, then "Edgarized" the homes with stained glass windows, frescos, murals, tile work, and wood carving. This collection contains over 400 images of the homes, which remarkably remain intact today.
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