Most Popular Books by Ann Goldstein

Ann Goldstein is the author of Christopher Wool (1998), Jennifer Bornstein (2005), Martin Kippenberger (2008), Reconsidering the Object of Art (1995), A Dialogue about Recent American and European Photography (1991).

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Christopher Wool

release date: Jan 01, 1998
Christopher Wool
Published on the occasion of the first survey of Wool''s work at the Los Angeles Museum of Contemporary Art from July to October 1998, this book features all of this artist''s work to date. Drawn from sources in everyday or vernacular culture, Wool''s imagery has ranged from the rolled "wallpaper" images of flowers, vines, or dots, to using rubber-stamps, stencils, or silkscreens. Working with language as image since the late 1980s, Wool has restructured words ("prankster", "adversary", "comedian", "paranoic", "riot", "fool") or common phrases ("cats in the bag", "the show is over", "run dog run") into all-over compositions of stencilled block letters that traverse or grid the picture plane while maintaining the integritiy of their meaning. Recently, Wool has turned from the techniques of image construction to exploring methods of image destruction in the silkscreened, overpainted, and spraypainted works of the mid-1990s.

Jennifer Bornstein

release date: Jan 01, 2005
Jennifer Bornstein
Jennifer Bornstein ISBN 0-914357-93-X / 978-0-914357-93-3 Paperback, 9 x 11 in. / 64 pgs / 10 color and 40 duotones. / U.S. $24.95 CDN $30.00 July / Art

Martin Kippenberger

release date: Jan 01, 2008
Martin Kippenberger
Works spanning the legendary and prolific artist''s twenty-year career, including many of his self-portraits, paintings, sculptures, works on paper, installations, and exhibition posters.

Reconsidering the Object of Art

Reconsidering the Object of Art
Reconsidering the Object of Artexamines a generally underexposed (and therefore often misunderstood) period in contemporary art and highlights artists whose practices have inspired much of the most significant art being produced today. It illustrates and discusses many crucial, ground-breaking works that have not been seen within their proper historical context, if they have been individually seen at all. By 1969 such artists as Michael Asher, John Baldessari, Marcel Broodthaers, Dan Graham, Douglas Huebler, Joseph Kosuth, Lawrence Weiner and others had begun to create works using a variety of media that sought to reevaluate certain fundamental premises about the formal, material, and contextual definitions of art. This first comprehensive overview of Conceptual art in English documents the work of fifty-five artists, work that marked a significant rupture with traditional forms and concepts of painting, sculpture, photography, and film. Also included are essays that elucidate the significant aesthetic issues that gave rise, in both America and Europe, to the highly individual, but related, modes of Conceptual art. Lucy Lippard (art historian) writes on the broader sociopolitical milieu in which this work was made; Stephen Melville (Professor of Art History, Ohio State University) probes the theoretical and philosophical underpinnings of Conceptual art; and Jeff Wall (artist) discusses the relationship between Conceptual art and photography. Anne Rorimer and Ann Goldstein (curators of the exhibition the book accompanies) respectively take up the role of language in this work, and discuss each of the artists. Copublished with the Museum of Contemporary Art, Los Angeles

A Dialogue about Recent American and European Photography

release date: Jan 01, 1991

Cosima Von Bonin

release date: Jan 01, 2007
Cosima Von Bonin
Text by Manfred Hermes, Bennett Simpson, Ann Goldstein, Isabella Graw.

In un'altra lingua

release date: May 12, 2015
In un'altra lingua
Ann Goldstein e Domenico Scarpa, una traduttrice e uno studioso che hanno collaborato all''impresa, dialogano su Levi e la traduzione: nel significato artigianale della parola, e nel suo senso più ampio.

In un'altra lingua-In another language

release date: Jan 01, 2015

This is Not to be Looked at

This is Not to be Looked at
Text by Paul Schimmel, Ann Goldstein, Rebecca Morse.

The Story of a New Name

release date: Oct 01, 2019

Essays on the International Trade of Centrally Planned Economies

Effectiveness of the Test of Infant Motor Performance as an Educational Tool for Parents

release date: Jan 01, 2006

William Leavitt

release date: Jan 01, 2011

Essays on the International Trade of Contrally Planning Economics

Protecting Public Trust Resources in America's Private Forests

release date: Jan 01, 2022
Protecting Public Trust Resources in America's Private Forests
Privately-owned forests in the U.S. provide ecological and socioeconomic benefits to Americans. At the same time, they challenge common law principles that govern the administration of public goods. There is long-standing tension between private property rights, which entitles forest landowners to make land management decisions about their properties, and the role of state governments in protecting public trust resources on behalf of the general public. Each state chooses to protect public trust resources on private lands in a different way, meaning the U.S. is a patchwork of diverse private forest policy approaches. Describing this range of approaches can help inform policy discussions. Researchers typically administer quantitative surveys to identify policy diversity, but few have utilized qualitative methods to characterize policy approaches to forest management on private lands. This two-part study addresses this gap in literature by sampling the diversity of state-level forest policies present in the U.S. In Chapter 1, I use qualitative interviews with forestry policy experts to provide an in-depth look at different state forest policies across 12 case studies. In Chapter 2, I further explore the California case study to understand its highly regulatory forest policies from a landowner perspective. I interviewed a group of California family forest landowners to understand how they perceive the state''s balance between private property rights and public trust doctrine and how they navigate their regulatory policy environment to successfully achieve their forest management objectives. Examining this cross-section of U.S. forest policy diversity builds additional nuance into traditional frameworks (e.g., voluntary-to-regulatory framings), which allows for key comparisons between states and adds in-depth forest policy expert and landowner perspectives to the body of state-level forest policy literature.

Biological Aspects of Leishmania and Its Intracellular Behavior

MOCA Focus: Jennifer Bornstein

release date: Jan 01, 2005

Allen Ruppersberg

release date: Jan 01, 2006

Relationships Among Quality of Life, Self-care, and Affiliated Individuation in Persons on Chronic Warfarin Therapy

release date: Jan 01, 2013
Relationships Among Quality of Life, Self-care, and Affiliated Individuation in Persons on Chronic Warfarin Therapy
This descriptive, correlational, cross-sectional study explored the relationships among the variables self-care action, self-care knowledge, and affiliated individuation and quality of life for persons on chronic warfarin therapy. This study also explored the moderating effects of self-care knowledge and affiliated individuation on quality of life. This research was guided by a theoretical framework based on modeling and role-modeling theory (Erickson, Tomlin, & Swain, 1983). The sample consisted of 83 adults between the ages of 30 to 91 years. The majority of participants were Caucasian, educated, retired and almost evenly distributed between male and female. Each subject completed the following instruments: the Oral Anticoagulation Knowledge (OAK) test, the Duke Anticoagulation Satisfaction Scale (DASS), the Basic Needs Satisfaction Inventory (BNSI), and the generic quality of life survey (SF36v2). Data was analyzed using correlation and hierarchical multiple regression analysis. Results indicated significant correlations among most of the study variables. Self-care action significantly explained variances in all but two quality of life variables. Self-care knowledge and affiliated individuation had statistically significant moderating effects on the DASS negative impact and hassles/burdens subscales. Self-care knowledge also demonstrated a significant moderating effect on the SF36v2 physical function subscale. These findings support the concepts proposed by the study''s theoretical framework. This research serves as validation of Acton''s (1997) study findings for the concept of affiliated individuation and its value as a self-care resource in a specific clinical population.

Understanding the Role of Personal Transformation in Adults who Have Survived Childhood Cancer

release date: Jan 01, 2010
Understanding the Role of Personal Transformation in Adults who Have Survived Childhood Cancer
The narrative stories of transformation of childhood cancer survivors were examined in comparison to the established research in the same area. The established research that is available is based on statistical criteria, which examines the quality of life of adult survivors. Based on such criteria, the quality of life of childhood cancer survivors has indicated mixed results indicating that more research is needed to better serve the growing population of survivors. In contrast, this study sought to compare the outcome of a quality of life survey versus the individual stories of survivors. The findings suggest that the survey does not accurately reflect the quality of life of the adult survivors. Also by including narrative stories this study offers a forum for survivors by giving them a voice.
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