American Art Review study online worksheet for "Greenville County Museum of Art, The Southern Collection" (original) (raw)

American Art Review month and year: VOLUME SEVEN NUMBER 6 - DECEMBER-JANUARY 1996

author(s): Martha R. Severens

title of American Art Review article: "Greenville County Museum of Art, The Southern Collection"

Note: TFAO asks that contractor obtain (X) permissions for reprinting of possible related catalogue essay or essays as first choice.

AAR article and Google books says there is a catalog essay by Martha R. Severens with introduction by William Gerdts. ISBN 1555951023

Also other AAR artcles by author:

"The Charleston Renaissance" American Art Review September-October 1999 (Volume XI, Number 5)

"Treasures from the Smithsonian American Art Museum" American Art Review March-April 2000 (Volume XII, Number 2)

"Southern Scene" American Art Review January-February 2001 (Volume XIII, Number 1)

"American Impressionism in Context" _American Art Review_January-February 2002 (Volume XIV, Number 1)

**"**Sidney Dickinson: Southern Allegories" American Art Review May-June 2003 (Volume XV, Number 3)

**"**Melting Pot: Art That Looks Like America" American Art Review March-April 2004 (Volume XVI, Number 2)

"Waterworks: 150 Years of Watercolor" _American Art Review_September-October 2004 (Volume XVI, Number 5)

**"**William H. Johnson: Native Son" _American Art Review_May-June 2005 (Volume XVII, Number 3)

"What Modern Looked Like" American Art Review September-October 2005 (Volume XVII, Number 5)

"An American Celebration" American Art Review July-August 2006 (Volume XVIII, Number 4)

"The Art of History" American Art Review September-October 2007 (Volume XIX, Number 5)

TFAO has published 3 texts by the author.


for use in reprinting of underlying essays

reprint of:

catalogue text

catalogue essay excerpt

catalogue essay condensation

other

dates of exhibit: 199

title of exhibit:

organizing museum:

museum phone:

museum library phone:

library contact:

other contact:

copyright owner(s) of catalogue text:


recovery matrix composite score: 4

status:

-- assigned to Shana Johannessen on 1/20/09

-- approved by copyright holder Feb 10, 2009 via email

-- article reprinted in Resource Library :

The Southern Collection: A New Look at American Art History; article by Martha R. Severens (2/26/09)

From: Martha Severens

Date: Feb 11, 2009 10:25am

Subject: Re: Severens articles

To: Shana Johannessen <sj..

I can confirm that you have permission from both the author and the institution and there is no need to contact any one else.

From: Martha Severens

Date: Tue Feb 10, 2009 11:08:26 AM US/Pacific

To: <info@t

Cc: <sj

Subject: Severens articles

I am pleased to give permission to the Resource Library to include the following articles on line. I was not compensated by American Art Review nor paid in any way. The Greenville County Museum of Art and I would be the copyright holders.

"Greenville County Museum of Art: The Southern Collection" AAR Dec 1995/Jan 1996

"Southern Scene" AAR Jan/Feb 2001

"Melting Pot: Art that Looks Like America" AAR Mar/Apr 2004

"Waterworks: 150 Years of Watercolor" AAR Sept/Oct 2004

"What Modern Art Looked Like" AAR Sept/Oct 2005

"An American Celebration" AAR July/Aug 2006

--

Martha R. Severens

Curator

Greenville County Museum of Art

420 College Street

Greenville SC 29601

864-271-7570


A special TFAO emphasis is building an archive of material, authored by scholars and other informed individuals, beneficial for the study of art history in the United States. As a public service, without charge to readers, TFAO annually publishes a number of scholarly texts relating to American representational art in its publication Resource Library.

American Art Review, ISSN 0092-1327, is published on paper and noted for its scholarly content by both senior authors and younger scholars. Tel 913.451.8801. The time period focus of American Art Review is from the Colonial era through 1970. The first issue of Volume 1 of the magazine was published in September, 1973. Publication was suspended with Volume 4 in November, 1978. Publication resumed with Volume V in the Summer of 1992 and continues to the present. In the 19th century there was a journal with a similar title, The American Art Review: A Journal Devoted to The Practice, Theory, History and Archaeology of Art edited by S.R. Koehler.

From time to time, TFAO contacts copyright owners of American Art Review articles and requests permission to reprint catalogue essays from which the articles were derived. -- without illustrations -- in Resource Library. As an alternate, TFAO may obtain permission to reprint the American Art Review articles without illustrations.

Currently TFAO volunteers and contractors are reviewing articles published in American Art Review from 1992 through 1998 in alphabetical order by author's last name. Contractors enter into an independent contractor agreement with TFAO for processing specified texts. For information on contracting opportunities please click here.

An article's status page is linked to the Author Study and Index page listing the American Art Review article(s) being studied.

master page = 7aa22


Links to sources of information outside of our web site are provided only as referrals for your further consideration. Please use due diligence in judging the quality of information contained in these and all other web sites. Information from linked sources may be inaccurate or out of date. TFAO neither recommends or endorses these referenced organizations. Although TFAO includes links to other web sites, it takes no responsibility for the content or information contained on those other sites, nor exerts any editorial or other control over them. For more information on evaluating web pages see TFAO's General Resourcessection in Online Resources for Collectors and Students of Art History.

Visit the Table of Contents for _Resource Library._for thousands of articles and essays on American art.

Copyright 2008 Traditional Fine Arts Organization, Inc., an Arizona nonprofit corporation. All rights reserved.