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Publications on Sale •934 THE METROPOLITAN MUSEUM OF ART PUBLICATIONS ON SALE •934 THE METROPOLITAN MUSEUM OF ART PUBLICATIONS ON SALE « NEW YORK 1934 NOTE All the publications obtainable at the Museum have been listed in this pamphlet, those published by the Mu­ seum and those issued by other publishers on subjects re­ lated to the Museum collections, in most cases written by members of its staff. The Museum publications fall into two groups: those which concern the history and mechanism of the Museum as an institution—its government, its equipment, its rules, its activities—here listed under Publications on Museum Economy; and those which concern the criticism and history of art and the description of objects of art, listed under Publications on Art—General Works, and Publica­ tions on Art—Special Fields. The various series issued by the Museum, the separate volumes of which have also been listed according to their subjects, are noted on pages 43-46. The publications listed—except those for which no prices are given, as they are distributed free—are sold at the Information Desk and by Charles Scribner's Sons, 597 Fifth Avenue, New York; Bernard Quaritch, II Grafton Street, New Bond Street, London; Karl W. Hiersemann, Konigstrasse 29, Leipzig C. I, Germany. Mail orders should be addressed to the Secretary of the Museum and should be accompanied by payment—from the United States by post-office order or by check on New York, drawn to the order of The Metropolitan Museum of Art; from foreign countries by international money order. A postage charge of fifteen cents should be added to the listed price of the publication; if more than one item is ordered an additional five cents should [in] PUBLICATIONS OF THE MUSEUM MUSEUM ECONOMY BIBLIOGRAPHY •Bibliography of Museums and Museology, by William Clifford. 8vo. Paper. 1923 $ 1.50 EQUIPMENT Printing Types Used by the Museum Press. l2mo. Paper. 1934. •Furniture, with Drawings and Measurements, and Various Devices Used by the Museum. 55 ill., 3 pi., 8vo. Paper. 1930 1.50 GOVERNMENT Charter, Constitution, By-Laws, as Amended to October, 1929. 8vo. Paper. 1929. HISTORY Annual Reports of the Trustees [of the Mu­ seum]. 8vo. Paper. 1871-date. Current reports sent to all Members. Index to the Annual Reports [of the Museum], 1871-1921. 3 vol. 8vo. Boards. 1907, 1913, 1929. *A History of The Metropolitan Museum of Art, with a Chapter on the Early Institu­ tions of Art in New York, by Winifred E. Howe. 64 ill., 8vo. Boards. 1913 3.00 The story of the Museum from 1869 to 1912, valuable both as a record of an interesting page of history and as an epitome of the trend and de­ velopment common to all museums of art during PUBLICATIONS OF THE MUSEUM HISTORY (cont.) this period. An introduction on the early institu­ tions of art in New York recalls several forerunners of the modern museum, almost forgotten except by antiquarians. The Fiftieth Anniversary Celebration [of the Museum], MDCCCLXX-MCMXX. 410. Paper. 1921. Large paper copies. A Review of Fifty Years' Development, Printed on the Occasion of the Fiftieth Anniversary of the Founding of the Museum. 8vo. Paper. 1920. A Brief Record of Development [of the Mu­ seum], 1870-1922. 8vo. Paper. 1923. •Addresses on the Occasion of the Opening of the American Wing. 8vo. Boards. 1925. Typography by D. B. Updike $ 5.00 The Sixtieth Anniversary of the Founding of the Museum: Exercises on the Occasion of the Annual Meeting of the Corporation, MCMXXX. 8vo. Paper. Supp. to the Bul­ letin, 1930. PRACTICE •Tentative Lists of Objects Desirable for a Col­ lection of Casts, Sculptural and Architec­ tural, Intended to Illustrate the History of Plastic Art. 410. Paper. 1891 1.00 The Notable Bequest of Isaac D. Fletcher (Museum Monograph, no. 1), by Robert W. de Forest. 8vo. Paper. 1917 .10 The Restoration of Ancient Bronzes and Other Alloys, by Colin G. Fink and Charles H. Eldridge. 40 ill., 8vo. Paper. 1926 .50 Some Business Methods Used in the Museum, by Henry W. Kent. i6mo. Paper. 1926. MUSEUM PRACTICE Museums and the Industrial World (Industrial Arts Monograph, no. i), by Richard F. Bach. 8vo. Paper. 1926 $ .10 Museum Service to the Art Industries: a His­ torical Statement to 1927 (Industrial Arts Monograph, no. 3), by Richard F. Bach. 8vo. Paper. 1927 .10 Art in Merchandise: Notes on the Relation­ ships of Stores and Museums (Industrial Arts Monograph, no. 4), by Robert W. de Forest. 8vo. Paper. 1928 .10 How Museums Can Most Wisely Dispose of Surplus Material (Museum Monograph, no. 2), by Robert W. de Forest. 8vo. Paper. 1929 10 •Ultra-violet Rays and Their Use in the Ex­ amination of Works of Art, by James J. Rorimer. frontis., 2 diagrams, 47 ill., 8vo. I93I- In paper 2.00 In cloth 2.50 Chapter I, "Ultra-violet Rays and the Apparatus Required for Their Production," describes the prin­ ciple of examination by ultra-violet rays and the apparatus used. Chapter II, "Observations on the Examination of Works of Art under Ultra-violet Rays," records in detail actual laboratory experi­ ments with objects of various materials. The Metropolitan Museum of Art, What It Is and What It Does: a Dictionary of Mu­ seum Facts and Activities. l6mo. Paper. 1934- See also Art Museums and Schools (p. 5). For museum economy in its various aspects see also articles in Metropolitan Museum Studies and the Bulletin of The Metropolitan Museum of 3 PUBLICATIONS OF THE MUSEUM Art (p. 6); the latter may be located through the Index to the Bulletin of The Metropolitan Museum of Art, Volumes I-XXII, 1905-1927 (p. 6), and separate indexes to later volumes. ART—GENERAL WORKS AESTHETICS •The Analysis of Art, by DeWitt H. Parker. 1 38 pi., 8vo. Cloth. Yale University Press. 1926 $ 4.00 Art defined as the expression of the imagination in terms of the senses, the imagination itself being the product of the wish; reproductions of paint­ ings, sculpture, and architecture are used as illustra­ tive material. The six chapters cover the following subjects: What Is Art?, The Problem of Aesthetic Form, Design and Representation in the Plastic Arts, Art and Pain, The Paradox of the Industrial Arts, The Function of Art. •The Psychology and Aesthetics of Forgery, by Hans Tietze. 31 ill., 4to. Paper. Separate reprinted from Metropolitan Museum Stud­ ies, 1934. (In press.) EDUCATION •Art Museums and Schools: Four Lectures De­ livered at The Metropolitan Museum of Art, by Stockton Axson, Kenyon Cox, G. Stanley Hall, and Oliver S. Tonks. 12mo. Boards. 1913 1.00 GUIDES The Cloisters: a Brief Guide, by Joseph Breck. 31 ill., map, 8vo. Paper. 1931 .25 Describes the collections of mediaeval art in this branch of the Museum, especially sculpture and the decorative arts. It also contains brief but illu­ minating general statements concerning the art of the Romanesque and Gothic periods. PUBLICATIONS OF THE MUSEUM GUIDES (cont.) A Guide to the Collections. 8vo. Paper. 1934. Part I: Ancient and Oriental Art. 69 ill., 9 plans $ .25 Covers the following collections of the Museum —Egyptian art; Mesopotamian art; classical art; Near Eastern and Indian art; Near Eastern and Indian arms and armor; Far Eastern art; Japanese arms and armor—each preceded by a compact his­ torical introduction and an account of the general arrangement of the collection. A page is devoted to each gallery, pointing out the most important objects, giving an idea of their significance, and illustrating one of them. Part II: European and American Art. (kr /-n For guides to special collections see under Art —Special Fields. PERIODICALS Bulletin of The Metropolitan Museum of Art. ill., 8vo. 1905-date. Vol. I-date. Pub­ lished monthly. Subscription price 2.00 Single copies .20 Deals with the current events of the Museum, accessions, loans, and exhibitions. Many back num­ bers are out of print; those in stock are supplied at the regular price. Current numbers are sent to all Members. •Index to the Bulletin of The Metropolitan Museum of Art, Volumes I-XXII, 1905- 1927, by Frances B. Hawley. 8vo. Boards. 1928 .'. 1.75 •Metropolitan Museum Studies, ill., pi., 4to. 1928-date. Vol. I-date. Published semian­ nually. Subscription price per volume 7.00 Single parts 4.00 6 PERIODICALS Vol. I-III bound in cloth, per volume $12.50 Contains scholarly discussions and adequate re­ productions in halftone, photogravure, collotype, line, and color of noteworthy and often little- known objects in the collections. The articles are contributed by members of the Museum's curatorial staff and by scholars not officially connected with the Museum. Vol. I, part 1, is out of print except for the copies bound in cloth with part 2. Beginning with vol. IV, part 1, separates may be obtained of each article. The separates printed to date are listed under the subjects they concern. •The Children's Bulletin, edited by Winifred E. Howe, ill., 8vo. Published quarterly 1917-1932. Per copy .25 VOL. I. No. 3. The Voyage of the Argo, by Winifred E. Howe. The legend of Jason as painted by a XV century Floren­ tine. VOL. III. No. 2. The Talking Stove, by Winifred E. Howe. A story told in a XVII century Swiss room. No. 4. A Christmas Revel, by Winifred E. Howe. Painting and decorative arts in England, XVIII century. VOL. IV. No. 2. Two Little Flax Plants: the Story of Old Lace, by Winifred E. Howe. Lace making in Flanders, XVII- XVIII century. No. 3. Mayflower Descendants: a Tercentenary Story, by Winifred E. Howe. Told by American Colonial fur­ niture, pewter, and silver. No. 4. The Story of a Hunting Rug, by Winifred E.
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