Works
- The Notebooks of Leonardo Da Vinci by Leonardo da Vinci, translated by Jean Paul Richter
- The severall Habits of English Women and Theatru Mulierum by Wenceslaus Hollar (1640s)
- "Art in the Stone Age" in Popular Science Monthly, 2 (January 1873)
- "The Physiology of Authorship" by Robert Edward Francillon in Popular Science Monthly, 7 (May 1875)
- "The Monstrous in Art" by Samuel Kneeland in Popular Science Monthly, 14 (April 1879)
- "The Pleasure of Visual Form I" by James Sully in Popular Science Monthly, 16 (April 1880)
- "The Pleasure of Visual Form II" by James Sully in Popular Science Monthly, 17 (May 1880)
- "Prehistoric Art in America" by Jean-François-Albert du Pouget in Popular Science Monthly, 24 (April 1884)
- The Metaphysics of Fine Art, 1893 by Arthur Schopenhauer, translated by Thomas Bailey Saunders
- Modern and contemporary Czech art, 1924 by Antonín Matějček and Zdeněk Wirth
- Pulchrism: Championing Beauty as the Purpose of Art by Jesse Waugh, 2015
- The Arts, a monthly magazine about fine arts (mainly visual), published from 1920-1931, with an emphasis on modern and American art.
Neoplasticism (De Stijl)
- Neoplasticism, or De Stijl (Dutch for "The Style"), was a Dutch artistic movement founded in 1917. Proponents of De Stijl sought to express a new utopian ideal of spiritual harmony and order. They advocated pure abstraction and universality by a reduction to the essentials of form and colour; they simplified visual compositions to the vertical and horizontal directions, and used only primary colors along with black and white."De Stijl," in Wikipedia, the Free Encyclopedia
Newspaper and magazine articles about art
- "Fine Arts in Bohemia" by Jaroslav Egon Salaba-Vojan in The Bohemian Review, 1 (9, 10, 11–12) and 2 (2, 4, 7)
- "Prague, city of seven hills" by John Charles Vondrouš in The Czechoslovak Review, 3 (1) (1919)
- "Josef Mánes" by Vojta Beneš in The Czechoslovak Review, 3 (2) (1919)
- "Joža Úprka" by Jozef Žák-Marušiak in The Czechoslovak Review, 3 (4) (1919)
- "Mikuláš Aleš" by Vojta Beneš in The Czechoslovak Review, 3 (5) (1919)
- "Albin Polášek" by Josef Mach in The Czechoslovak Review, 3 (7) (1919)
- "Joža Úprka, Leading Slovak Painter" by Charles John Heitzman in Czecho-Slovak Student Life, 18 (6) (April, 1928)