Weight | 0.4119 kg |
---|---|
Dimensions | 224 × 145 × 27 mm |
Cover | Hardback |
Publication Year | 2022 |
Publisher | Harper North |
ISBN | 9780008472894 |


£14.99
Where There’s Muck, There’s Bras: Lost Stories of the Amazing Women of the North
Once there were queens in the North – warrior women, leaders, fighters, diplomats, rulers. We may have forgotten their names, but a legacy remains: in the land, in our voices, in the stories we tell and the lives we lead.
From rebels to writers, athletes to astronauts, join Kate Fox as she takes us on a sharp, funny and eye-opening journey through the lives of some extraordinary women whose achievements have too long been hidden. Whether it’s Hildas in headscarves or Nanas with banners, these are women with something to say.
From Cartimandua, forgotten Iron Age queen, to Woodbine-smoking football player Lily Parr, Kate with her trademark wit and sense of fun, shows how these astonishing trailblazers laid the ground for modern stars from Victoria Wood to Little Mix, Nicola Adams to Lubaina Himid.
Enlightening, inimitable and a call to arms, Where there’s Muck, there’s Bras shows us it’s time to rediscover our hidden heroes.
Out of stock
Related products
A Traveller’s History of Turkey
£4.90Throughout the millennia Turkey formed the core of several Empires–Persia, Rome, Byzantium–before becoming the center of the Ottoman Empire. All these civilizations have left their marks on the landscape, architecture and art of Turkey–a place of fascinating overlapping cultures. Traveller’s History of Turkey offers a concise and readable account of the region from prehistory right up to the present day. It covers everything from the legendary Flood of Noah, the early civilization of Catal Huyuk seven thousand years before Christ, through the treasures of Troy, Alexander the Great, the Romans, Seljuks, Byzantines and the Golden Age of the Sultans, to the twentieth century’s great changes wrought by Kemal Ataturk and the strong position Turkey now holds in the world community.
Women in Design
£14.99A history of women designers and consumers from 1900 to the present day.
The work of women designers has not traditionally been the focus of mainstream histories of design. By revealing the untold story of female design pioneers, this comprehensive introduction celebrates their crucial role in the history of modern processes of making.
Arranged chronologically, this guide considers the structural barriers to professional success and how women overcame these hurdles, charting the success of designers including Anni Albers at the Bauhaus, the architect Eileen Grey, interior decorator Elsie de Wolfe and fashion icon Mary Quant, focusing on the key subjects of architecture, craft, fashion, furniture, graphics, interior, product and textile design. The link between early twentieth-century revolutionary design and lifestyle is explored, as well the ideas of shopping and consumerism as a liberating activity. The important contribution of designers during and after the Second World War is also discussed, along with design activism, design collectives and the current success of women working transnationally in architecture and design.
The House of Dudley
£25.00Marriage, murder, deadly rumour, riot and rebellion – here, for the first time, is the story of England’s Borgias, a noble house competing for proximity to the throne through cunning, adultery and sheer audacity. In a narrative as rigorous and thought-provoking as it is page-turning, Joanne Paul traces the history of an utterly compelling family – the drama and tragedy of the House of Dudley.
Velazquez
£16.99A comprehensive introduction to Velazquez’s life and art which includes a discussion of all his major works.
Diego Velazquez (1599-1660) was one of the towering figures of western painting and Baroque art, a technical master renowned for his focus on realism and startling veracity. Everything he painted was ‘treated’ as a portrait, from Spanish royalty and Pope Innocent X, to a mortar and pestle. This comprehensive introduction to Velazquez’s life and art includes a discussion of all his major works, and illustrates most of Velazquez’s surviving output of approximately 110 paintings. The artist’s greatest innovation – his unorthodox and revolutionary technique is explored in relation to the styles of certain of his most celebrated contemporaries both in Spain and beyond, including Titian and Rubens. The book concludes with a final chapter on the influence and importance of Velazquez’s art on later painters from the time of his own death to the art of recent times including Francisco Goya, Pablo Picasso, Francis Bacon and the Impressionists.
If These Apples Should Fall: Cezanne and the Present
£30.00A penetrating analysis of the work of one of the most influential painters in the history of modern art by one of the world’s most respected art historians.
For more than a century the art of Paul Cezanne was held to hold the key to modernity. His painting was a touchstone for Samuel Beckett as much as Henri Matisse. Rilke revered him deeply, as did Picasso. If we lost touch with his sense of life, they thought, we lost an essential element in our self-understanding.
If These Apples Should Fall: Cezanne and the Present looks back on Cezanne from a moment – our own – when such judgments may seem to need justifying. What was it, the book asks, that held Cezanne’s viewers spellbound?
At the heart of Cezanne lies a sense of disquiet: a homelessness haunting the vividness, an anxiety underlying the appeal of colour. T. J. Clark addresses this strangeness head-on, examining the art of Pissarro, Matisse and others in relation to it. Above all, he speaks to the uncanniness and beauty of Cezanne’s achievement.