A site map.     Booksellers’ terminology     Buying books from us      Our specialties      Searching for books     Our book descriptions

How does one become an Aussie?   Art gallery     Links    Home    Who is serving you?    Contact us

 

 

Australia

Art/Design

Auto/Biography

Business

Fantasy/SF

Fiction

Non-Fiction

History

Hobbies

Literature

Mystery/Action

New Age

Reference

Religion

Self-Help

The World

Wartime

HOME

An Internet based second hand book store, Booksplendour is the place to search online for used, rare, out of print collectible and antiquarian books. We specialize in Australian Literature, New Age, Self-Help, Personal Growth, Alternative Lifestyle and Medicine, Business Motivational books, Fantasy Fiction, Science Fiction, History and Religion. Visit our online image gallery of Australian painting, and the Masters of Art Gallery to view our choice of images of artworks, and blogs on books and art.

 

Author:  

Title: 

Publisher: 

Subject: 

Sort by: 

Select your Currency

   First Edition

  Dust Jacket

  Signed

  Hard Cover

Shlof      

Search our inventory of approximately 17,000 books

Telephone: 07- 3202 7547       BN18307966        E-mail: voyen@iinet.net.au

BookSplendour is an online bookstore. As a registered business we have been online since 2002 . We offer personal service by the proprietors. We will promptly answer your inquiries and, if required, will send you digital images of the books. The books that we offer for sale are in our possession, therefore we can dispatch all orders on the next working day, using a superior packaging material for the books' protection.

We are situated in Pullenvale, a western suburb of  Brisbane, the capitol of Queensland, on the eastern coast of Australia. If you have not heard of  Australia, this is where you find it.

 

Our Australia wide charges on standard deliveries for books ordered through our site (in the Australian dollars):

 Parcels under 500g - A$5.50 (Express: $7.50). Parcels over 500g - A$9.00 (Express $11.00). There is no extra charge for books on multiple orders. Orders with the total value over A$100.00 are delivered free of charge. *** 

INTERNATIONAL ORDERS (in the US dollars)

Approx. $9.00 for a parcel under 500g (smaller paperbacks, some hardbacks), $12.00 under 750g (larger p/b and many h/b) or $14.00 up to 1kg (larger h/b), shipped economy air to anywhere in the world, delivered in about 2-3 weeks, depending on exact location. Priority Airmail is also available at a higher cost. If unsure, please E-mail us for a quote. Shipping charges are subject to changes in accordance to currency fluctuations.

OUR TERMS OF SALES: Books are offered subject to prior sale. We usually ship books within 24 hours after receiving an order. Internationally, orders are sent by economy air, within Australia by regular parcel post, unless buyer wishes otherwise. Books can be returned if they are received in a condition not as described. We must be notified by email or phone within 7 days of customer receiving book that there is a problem. We provide a full money back guarantee (excluding postage costs) if book does not conform to our description and if returned within 7 days of receipt of complaint. 

We accept Visa, Mastercard, American Express, PayPal. Cheques, direct bank deposits, or money orders in Australian dollars only, please.

 

Blog - The art we like:       Alphonse (Alfons) Mucha (1860 - 1939)

Having had his application to study at the Prague Academy of Arts rejected, the Czech born Mucha journeyed to Vienna, where he attended an evening class in drawing, and later to Munich, where between 1885 - 87 he studied at the Academy of Fine Arts. He moved to Paris in the late 1880s. When in 1890 he held his first one man show in Paris he was able to display well over 400 works. For a while in Paris he shared studio with another of our favourite painters, Paul Gauguine. Though the two artists had a great deal in common (for instance the desire to explore some of the darker corners of occultism by attending spiritualistic séances), it very soon became obvious that Mucha’s art was going to develop quite differently to that of his older companion. While Paris was at the grip of Impressionism and the budding Expressionism, Mucha obviously always saw himself more as a designer rather than an innovative artist. That is not to say that he was not original. His originality lies in the way he was able to marry the ornamental design with the figurative painting, creating something that in his time was referred to as “Le Style Mucha”, before it became known as Art Nouveau (Mucha himself did not like the term, insisting that art was eternal and therefore could not be new).

Mucha's art, when he was at the peak of his creative powers around 1900, above all else is an apotheoses of womanhood. While his women are always extremely beautiful and often even voluptuous, one would hesitate to say that the artist saw them as “sex objects”, to use the present-day terminology. While their femininity is always strongly accentuated, there is something about them, perhaps their innocence, that reminds one more of the idealistic Pre-Raphaelite painters rather than Mucha's contemporary, the Viennese painter Gustav Klimt, whose portraits, while equally glamorous, are far more sensuous.

There is something else that lies underneath Mucha’s art. Not looking much for inspiration in the works of his contemporaries, nevertheless he could not escape the influence of the occult revival that had hit Paris just before his arrival. It was to inspire not only the visual artists of his and the next generation, but perhaps even more so the people in other fields of art, such as musical composers, architects, etc. Almost everything in Mucha’s art is about cycles, which to him are closely associated with the evolution of the human spirit.

The theatre posters that he designed for Sara Bernhardt for the play Gismonda became a sensation in Paris in December 1894. Virtually overnight, Mucha found himself famous.

In 1900, when the World Fair was held in Paris, Mucha received the prestigious commission to decorate the Austrian pavilion. Mucha stayed in Paris till 1906, when he went for several years to America, where he taught art at New York and Chicago. After 1910 he lived more or less permanently in Prague, but frequently travelled to America.

Mucha was a very versatile artist. He worked on advertisements for various products and on ornamental panels, he had his hand in architectural design, he made a large number of book illustrations, he designed jewellery, he even made some sculptures. From the age of 50 or so, after returning to his homeland, he became much preoccupied with an enormous project he named the Slav Epic, a cycle of monumental paintings illustrating the history of the Slavs, on which he worked intermittently until his death.  

Incidentally, the name Mucha (or moucha) in Czech means the fly. A fly on the wall... these pictures certainly could evoke such an image in one's mind... 

And one more thing: Mucha's name is nearly always mispronounced. The French are mainly to blame for this, but the English speakers don't fall far behind. Properly pronounced, the "ch" in his name should sound close to how the Scots would pronounce the "ch" in Loch Ness.

                                                              

                Mucha in front of the Sarah Bernhardt poster                                 A woman modelling for Mucha

Go to the gallery of Alphonse Mucha's art

 

©BookSplendour 2002-2006 - all rights reserved

Last update: 13th November 2006

counter customizable free hit