Wari artist(s) – Lime container – Wari – The Metropolitan Museum of Art https://www.metmuseum.org/art/collection/search/310681
Los Angeles: UCLA Cotsen Institute of Archaeology Press, 2018. Jones, Julie.
Los Angeles: UCLA Cotsen Institute of Archaeology Press, 2018. Jones, Julie.
Inscription: Inscribed (in ink, in image, center): a) Letters from HomeInscribed (in pencil, along bottom of image):b) 2/20 Letter from home I Zarina 2004c) 2/20 Letter from home II Zarina 2004d) 2/20 Letter from home III Zarina 2004e) 2/20 Letter from home IV Zarina 2004f) 2/20 Letter from home VI Zarina 2004g) 2/20 Letter from home VI Zarina 2004h) 2/20 Letter from home VII Zarina 2004i) 2/20 Letter from home VIII Zarina 2004Inscribed (in ink, in image, center):j) Letter from Home / A Portfolio of eight woodcuts and text by Zarina / Woodcuts and text printed in an edition of twenty / with two artist proofs / on Kozo paper and mounted on Somerset / Urdu text was printed from metal cuts of / original letters / This project was produced at the artists studio in / New York City
Los Angeles, 2012, p. 178, ill. p. 75 (Edition 5/7). Shanay Jhaveri.
Los Angeles: Conservation Science Press, 2011. p. 41.
Werl, Germany, 1887—Münster, 1968
correspondence with Vassily Kandinsky is preserved at the Getty Research Center, Los
The artistic expressions of the Wari and Tiwanaku societies dominated the Central Andes for nearly five hundred years (600–1000 CE).
Los Angeles: Cotsen Institute of Archaeology Press, 2018. Menzel, Dorothy.
Four Folios from the Emperor’s Album (nos. 55.121.10.39, .13, .21,.4r)This celebrated imperial Mughal album (muraqqa‘), known as the Shah Jahan, or Emperors’, Album originally consisted of fifty leaves containing paintings, illuminated pages, and calligraphy
Los Angeles. Los Angeles County Museum of Art.
Los Angeles: J. Paul Getty Museum, 2019. p. 183, fig. 66.
Los Angeles: J. Paul Getty Museum, 2019. p. 183, fig. 66.
The Met presents over 5,000 years of art from around the world for everyone to experience and enjoy.
the Art of the Ancient Americas, and Director of the Conservation Center at the Los
Glass Bowl and DishOf all the different categories of Mughal glass, the milky-white color of this bowl and dish ensemble constitutes the rarest type.[1] The opaque surfaces of the bowl and its matching tray are decorated with identical flowering shrubs enclosed within oval compartments, painted in two shades of gold and silver, now tarnished into a dark metallic gray
London, 1983, fig. 53; also, there is a similarly shaped vessel in the Los Angeles