Home
Books
Pages
Authors
Subjects
Home
»
The Art of the Moving Picture
THE UNCHALLENGED OUTLINE OF PHOTOPLAY CRITICAL METHOD
Cinema
Vachel Lindsay
THE POINT OF VIEW
THE PHOTOPLAY OF ACTION
THE INTIMATE PHOTOPLAY
THE MOTION PICTURE OF FAIRY SPLENDOR
THE PICTURE OF CROWD SPLENDOR
PATRIOTIC SPLENDOR
RELIGIOUS SPLENDOR
SCULPTURE-IN-MOTION
PAINTING-IN-MOTION
FURNITURE, TRAPPINGS, AND INVENTIONS IN MOTION
ARCHITECTURE-IN-MOTION
THIRTY DIFFERENCES BETWEEN THE PHOTOPLAYS AND THE STAGE
HIEROGLYPHICS
THE ORCHESTRA, CONVERSATION, AND THE CENSORSHIP
THE SUBSTITUTE FOR THE SALOON
CALIFORNIA AND AMERICA
PROGRESS AND ENDOWMENT
ARCHITECTS AS CRUSADERS
ON COMING FORTH BY DAY
THE PROPHET-WIZARD
THE ACCEPTABLE YEAR OF THE LORD
‹ THE GENERAL PHOTOPLAY SITUATION IN AMERICA, JANUARY 1, 1922
up
THE POINT OF VIEW ›
Popular Books
Popular Pages
The Best Portraits in Engraving
Masters of Water-Colour Painting
Anecdotes of Painters, Engravers, Sculptors and Architects and Curiosities of Art
Jean François Millet
Correggio
American Handbook of the Daguerrotype
Raphael
Rembrandt
Great Artists: Raphael, Rubens, Murillo, Dürer
Van Dyck
THE ROMAN FORUM
PAINTING IN ENGLAND.
ANCIENT GREECE AND ITALY.
PAINTING IN ITALY, FROM THE BEGINNING OF THE RENAISSANCE TO THE PRESENT CENTURY.
PAINTING IN FLANDERS, HOLLAND, AND GERMANY.
ST. ONOFRIO AND TASSO
THE APPIAN WAY
THE MARBLES OF ANCIENT ROME
THE EGYPTIAN OBELISKS
INDEX OF PLACES.
Today's Books
Today's Pages
The Best Portraits in Engraving
Masters of Water-Colour Painting
Raphael
Correggio
Michelangelo
Anecdotes of Painters, Engravers, Sculptors and Architects and Curiosities of Art
The Florentine Painters of the Renaissance
Handbook on Japanning
Great Artists: Raphael, Rubens, Murillo, Dürer
Van Dyck
ANCIENT GREECE AND ITALY.
ST. MICHAEL SLAYING THE DRAGON
SOME OF REMBRANDT'S FAMOUS CONTEMPORARIES IN HOLLAND
THE MARBLES OF ANCIENT ROME
THE ROMAN FORUM
PAINTING IN ENGLAND.
PAINTING IN FLANDERS, HOLLAND, AND GERMANY.
INDEX OF PLACES.
PAINTING IN ITALY, FROM THE BEGINNING OF THE RENAISSANCE TO THE PRESENT CENTURY.
LECTURE I. ARCHITECTURE.