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Alan Powers (2) (1955–)

Author of Living With Books

For other authors named Alan Powers, see the disambiguation page.

48+ Works 1,242 Members 22 Reviews

About the Author

Alan Powers has been a guest curator at the Design Museum and Kettles Yard.

Works by Alan Powers

Living With Books (1999) 572 copies, 9 reviews
Modern: The Modern Movement in Britain (2005) 33 copies, 2 reviews
Eric Ravilious: Artist & designer (2013) 30 copies, 1 review
Living with Pictures (2000) 28 copies
2 Willow Road (1996) 16 copies, 1 review
Coleton Fishacre (1999) 16 copies
Nature in Design (1991) 15 copies
Upton House and Gardens (2009) 14 copies
Shop Fronts (1989) 14 copies
Evelyn Dunbar: The Lost Works (2015) — Contributor — 10 copies
100 Years of Architecture (2016) 10 copies, 1 review
Kenneth Rowntree: A Centenary Exhibition (2015) — Contributor — 6 copies
A Book of Jugs (1990) 1 copy

Associated Works

Ravilious & Co.: The Pattern of Friendship (2017) — Introduction — 84 copies
London Transport Posters (2008) — Contributor — 39 copies
Britain in the thirties (1979) — Contributor — 19 copies, 2 reviews
Modernism on Sea: Art and Culture at the British Seaside (2009) — Contributor — 16 copies
Festival of Britain (2001) — some editions — 16 copies
Away We Go! Advertising London's Transport (2006) — Introduction — 13 copies, 1 review
Parenthesis 20 (2011) — Reviewer — 7 copies
The Sixties (Twentieth Century Architecture) (2006) — Editor — 5 copies
Parenthesis 30 (2016) — Contributor — 5 copies
Parenthesis 6, August 2001 (2001) — Contributor — 5 copies
Parenthesis 18 (2010) — Contributor — 5 copies
Parenthesis 32 (2017) — Reviewer — 4 copies
Parenthesis 36 (2019) — Contributor — 3 copies
Studies in Illustration, No. 51, Summer 2012 (2012) — Contributor — 2 copies

Tagged

Common Knowledge

Members

Reviews

23 reviews
Following my reading of Sybil and Cyril by Jenny Uglow and Romantic Moderns by Alexandra Harris, this is a beautifully illustrated monograph of another English artist/illustrator of the inter-war years.
The text is interesting, providing some historical and biographical background, but concentrating on the art, and it is the numerous illustrations that make this book worthwhile.
Reading a whole book about Ravilious hasn’t been an artistic revelation, as I have already seen illustrations of show more what I still consider to be the most memorable and impactful works. However the author has done an excellent job of showing the different mediums in which Ravilious worked, woodcuts and watercolours are expected, but there are also murals (now mainly lost), designs for Wedgewood Potteries, fabric designs and even furniture.

For me, Ravilious’ most engaging picture is the watercolour Train Landscape from 1939, with the chalk Westbury Horse seen through a railway carriage window. It surprised me to realise that the picture only measures about 44cm x 55cm. However seeing illustrations of so much work by Ravilious, the consistent emotional detachment of the art became very evident as you are exposed to the repeated absence or simplification of human figures. But this detachment can also create a nostalgic, timeless quality, even when the landscape is anchored with contemporary (now historical) objects.

A 2013 Guardian review which I think captures something of what I feel:
[Ravilious] remains the artist of the empty landscape and the uninhabited room, of a transient period in national life when the old and the new could still, just, be reconciled – even if he did have to create a parallel imaginative reality in which to do it.
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This title has been on my "maybe" shelf for years; the shelf serves for books I need to think about, need more information on, or books I'm only going to buy if I find them used and cheap. Living with Books met that last condition, as I'd heard it was a bit disappointing overall.

I'd heard correctly; it's a bit disappointing. The pictures are great - some really clever solutions and some just gorgeous libraries are included, but the text has less to do with books and libraries than it does show more about interior design and architectural theory, about which I have mostly derisive opinions.

I gave it an extra half-star though because it includes a few pages at the back with DIY instructions for making different types of bookcases, and I thought that was a nice touch. For that reason and the good pics, I'll hang on to my copy, but I'm awfully glad I found it used and cheap.
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I LOVED this book! Filled with beautiful photos of homes in which people make books an intimate part of their lives and decor. Rather than making room for books in your home this book tells (and shows) you how to beautifully and tastefully build your home around your books. This can be a dangerous book, as I guarantee it will make you want to completely re-organize/ -decorate your house and incorporate the ideas you find in here. I've already taken the cabinet doors off my linen cabinet to show more make an eccentric but charming new book-nook. show less
Disappointing after AT HOME WITH BOOKS; this is more a photo book for decorators, not book lovers. It's less about storage or library design and more about how to decorate your house with books.

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Statistics

Works
48
Also by
17
Members
1,242
Popularity
#20,660
Rating
4.0
Reviews
22
ISBNs
75
Languages
8

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