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American treasures
Books that highlight our cultural heritage REVIEWS BY LINDA M. CASTELLITTO From portraits of presidents to surveys of art and architecture, this season heralds the arrival of books perfect for curious sorts who want to learn more aboutor gain a new perspective onour nation's history. Thanks to intriguing photos, compelling text and a wealth of insight, these books will educate, entertain, inform and bemuse. Perhaps they'll serve as an antidote to post-election fever, too.
William G. Scheller, author of Columbus and the Age of Discovery and America's Historic Places, among others, puts his history chops to excellent use in America: A History in ArtThe American Journey Told by Painters, Sculptors, Photographers, and Architects. The book is arranged in chronological order, from the first Americans to the new millennium. Commentary and captions accompany the 300-plus reproductions, from paintings to photos, political posters to objets d'art. Social, political, economic and geographic context are explored in detail, too. For example, regarding Caltrans 7 (a Los Angeles Department of Transportation building completed in 2004), Scheller notes that, just as the architectural firm's name, Morphosis, doesn't include "meta" as a way to indicate design is changeable and fluid like our surroundings, the building itself is wrapped in a sheath that opens or closes based on the heat and light that touches it. Scheller writes, "The United States has been since its inception . . . a study in the balance of pragmatism and idealism; of stubborn cultural independence and slavish devotion to the foreign; of conservatism and experimentation." The artists represented here shore up that assertion: looking at America through the lens of creations by Currier & Ives, Georgia O'Keeffe, Dorothea Lange, Andy Warhol and scores of lesser-known talents is a history lesson indeed.
By William G. Scheller Black Dog & Leventhal, $40 320 pages, ISBN 9781579127794
Ailey Ascending's large format and its text/image combination enhance the feeling of experiencing the dancers' world. Introductory pieces by Judith Jamison, artistic director and former lead dancer; Anna Deavere Smith; Khephra Burns and former Essence editor Susan L. Taylor describe Ailey's gifts, dedication and influence on the world of dance. The photos capture the grace of the Ailey dancers, and the range of compositionsclose-ups of sculpted faces and bodies, a quartet onstage, a lone dancer stretching in front of a window as the city races by behind herencourage contemplation and appreciation. This book is a fitting tribute to Ailey's work, which, as Burns and Taylor write, "was dance and theater, black and universal and wholly American."
By Andrew Eccles Chronicle, $50 144 pages, ISBN 9780811864800
The Kunhardt family has been maintaining a collection of Lincoln memorabilia and writing about him for five generations. Now, the authors of Lincoln: An Illustrated Biography are back with the follow-up volume Looking for Lincoln: The Making of an American Icon, published to commemorate the bicentennial of our 16th president's birth. It's an "exploration of how Lincoln was remembered and memorialized in the first six decades after his life," as Doris Kearns Goodwin writes in the introduction. Accordingly, the book begins on the day of Lincoln's assassination; readers may pore over eyewitness accounts, photos of Ford's Theatre and other materials associated with April 14, 1865. The book's exhaustive attention to detail continues apaceit includes photos of Lincoln's family and friends; wartime remembrances; Frederick Douglass' recollections of his first and last encounters with the president; and more. A photo gallery makes a fitting conclusion: the book offers a variety of perspectives on Lincoln's legacy, and the images show different aspects of one of our most revered presidents.
By The Kunhardt family Knopf, $50 512 pages, ISBN 9780307267139
By Chuck Wills Running Press, $45 92 pages, ISBN 9780762434381
It's been 45 years since John F. Kennedy's presidency was tragically cut short, but the national fascination with his family remains strong. The Kennedy Family Album: Personal Photos of America's First Family will delight Kennedy-philes and photography fans with a peek into the family's daily life. The photos, by Bob Davidoffwho for 50 years was photographer-in-residence at the family's Palm Beach home, until his death in 2004depict things readers might expect: stylish adults shopping at high-end stores; cousins frolicking outdoors; and every holiday a festive event. Text by Linda Corley, a longtime producer for PBS, brings context, color and life to the images. There are poignant onesJFK a few days before he was killed; matriarch Rose over the years, as she grew frail but retained her sparkleand funny ones, from a young Maria Shriver conducting her first interview (she turned the tables on an inquisitive journalist) to Caroline Kennedy wrestling with her cousins. The Kennedy Family Album is a lovely keepsake of an important era in American history.
By Bob Davidoff Running Press, $29.95 206 pages, ISBN 9781560259237
By Jessica Helfand Yale University Press, $45 190 pages, ISBN 9780300126358 Linda M. Castellitto writes from North Carolina.
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