
Hélène Alexander
Author of Fans
About the Author
Disambiguation Notice:
Please do not combine the Shire Album and the Costume Accessories series volume; both are by the same author, but are not the same work.
Series
Works by Hélène Alexander
Cool: Presenting a Cooling Image. Photography by the Lafayette Studio of Bond Street and Fans from The Fan Museum, Greenwich. (2007) 3 copies
Advertising-Advertising Fans 2 copies
The Fan Museum presents Royal fans : 5th March - 7th July 2002; [an exhibition to commemorate the golden jubilee]. (2002) 2 copies
Made in China: catalogue/Chinese Export Fans from the Edrina Collection and the Fan Museum (2015) 2 copies
Journal of the Museum of East Asian Art (Bath): Volume VI, 2001 — Contributor — 1 copy
Associated Works
Personal Treasures of the Tsars from the Peterhof State Museum, St Petersburg (1999) — Foreword — 2 copies
Tagged
Common Knowledge
- Gender
- female
- Disambiguation notice
- Please do not combine the Shire Album and the Costume Accessories series volume; both are by the same author, but are not the same work.
Members
Reviews
Ogi, A History of the Japanese Fan is an over-sized picture book on Japanese fans. It comes inside an impressive gold binder. Per Wikipedia, Ogi (扇) is a "folding fan thought to have originated in Japan in the 7th century, initially made of thin strips of bamboo or cypress threaded together. Fans were not only a practical way to keep cool, but also used to communicate important information and were status symbols in the samurai and upper classes." To me it's a coffee table book, but one show more with information for buyers of these gorgeous fans.
The book consists primarily of 112 pages photos of fans, with small paragraph descriptions interspersed, throughout the book. The authors, from the British Museum, have divided the fans into fifteen eras, from 10,000 BCE to the present. They have then organized fans into three categories: traditional Japanese fans, Japanese export fans and advertising, commemorative and contemporary fans. Each of these categories contain fans from their inception in 10,000 BCE to the present. Basically, Ogi is a museum book for an exhibition of fans in Britain. It has outstanding photos and I love to peruse its pages for relaxation. show less
The book consists primarily of 112 pages photos of fans, with small paragraph descriptions interspersed, throughout the book. The authors, from the British Museum, have divided the fans into fifteen eras, from 10,000 BCE to the present. They have then organized fans into three categories: traditional Japanese fans, Japanese export fans and advertising, commemorative and contemporary fans. Each of these categories contain fans from their inception in 10,000 BCE to the present. Basically, Ogi is a museum book for an exhibition of fans in Britain. It has outstanding photos and I love to peruse its pages for relaxation. show less
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Associated Authors
Statistics
- Works
- 21
- Also by
- 1
- Members
- 108
- Popularity
- #179,296
- Rating
- 4.5
- Reviews
- 2
- ISBNs
- 10

