Welcome to The Huntington Store
Welcome to The Huntington Store
Your purchase helps keep The Huntington's mission of enrichment, education, and stewardship alive for generations to come.
Your purchase helps keep The Huntington's mission of enrichment, education, and stewardship alive for generations to come.
Your purchase helps keep The Huntington's mission of enrichment, education, and stewardship alive for generations to come.
Rediscover the story of Little Women with this exquisite gilded and embossed special edition cover.
Your purchase helps keep The Huntington's mission of enrichment, education, and stewardship alive for generations to come.
Your purchase helps keep The Huntington's mission of enrichment, education, and stewardship alive for generations to come.
This opulent tote bag features a stunning reproduction of Sangorski & Sutcliffe's ca.1875 cover for a collection of poems by the celebrated 14th-century Persian poet Háfiz̤.
Your purchase helps keep The Huntington's mission of enrichment, education, and stewardship alive for generations to come.
Your purchase helps keep The Huntington's mission of enrichment, education, and stewardship alive for generations to come.
Your purchase helps keep The Huntington's mission of enrichment, education, and stewardship alive for generations to come.
The first major work to examine Joseph Cornell's relationship to American modernism
Joseph Cornell (1903–1972) is best known for his exquisite and alluring box constructions, in which he transformed found objects―such as celestial charts, glass ice cubes, and feathers―into enchanted worlds that blur the boundaries between fantasy and the commonplace. Situating Cornell within the broader artistic, cultural, and political debates of midcentury America, this innovative and interdisciplinary account reveals enchantment's relevance to the history of American modernism.
In this beautifully illustrated book, Marci Kwon explores Cornell's attempts to convey enchantment―an ephemeral experience that exceeds rational explanation―in material form. Examining his box constructions, graphic design projects, and cinematic experiments, she shows how he turned to formal strategies drawn from movements like Transcendentalism and Romanticism to figure the immaterial. Kwon provides new perspectives on Cornell's artistic and graphic design career, bringing vividly to life a wide circle of acquaintances that included artists, poets, writers, and filmmakers such as Mina Loy, Lincoln Kirstein, Frank O’Hara, and Stan Brakhage. Cornell's participation in these varied milieus elucidates enchantment's centrality to midcentury conversations about art's potential for power and moral authority, and reveals how enchantment and modernity came to be understood as opposing forces. Leading contemporary artists such as Betye Saar and Carolee Schneemann turned to Cornell's enchantment as a resource for their own anti-racist, feminist projects.
Spanning four decades of the artist's career, Enchantments sheds critical light on Cornell's engagement with many key episodes in American modernism, from Abstract Expressionism, 1930s "folk art," and the emergence of New York School poetry and experimental cinema to the transatlantic migration of Symbolism, Surrealism, and ballet.
Please refer to the welcome email which you received when purchasing or renewing your membership. At the bottom of this email, you will find your online member discount code. BEFORE checking out, please click on 'view cart' and type in your member code to the 'discount code or gift card' box. Your member discount will then be applied to your order.
If you are unable to locate your welcome email, please contact membership@huntington.org for further assistance.
We endeavor to process your order within 3 days of receipt. Once your order has been processed, packed, and ready to be shipped, you will receive an email with your item's tracking number.
Our couriers are USPS or UPS ground, If you would like your parcel to be shipped via FedEx or other courier, please add a comment in the NOTES section on your order and we will contact you for further information.
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You do not need a ticket to visit our store or pick up your order.
We accept returns within 30 days of delivery. Please note that food, beverages, teas, coffee, calendars, seasonal items, gift cards, trunk show items, and sale items are final sale and are not refundable.
To initiate a return, please email us at thestore@huntington.org to let us know that you would like to return your order. Then, follow the instructions on the paperwork included in your parcel.
Please note that returns must be received back at our warehouse in original packaging, with tags, and in a clean, resalable condition.
Once we have received your return in good condition, we will process a refund minus your original shipping charge. Please note that funds may take 1-3 days to appear back in your account, depending on your bank's T's and C's or payment method.
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