Mortality immortality?: the legacy of 20th-century art?
schema:subjectOf →
<ndcbca12752244d88bd89cf82cdacaf8fb6>
| schema:text | Based on a conference held at the Getty Center, Los Angeles, Mar. 25-27, 1998. |
|
schema:additional |
aat:300435416 |
| schema:name |
"Books"@en
|
|
schema:same |
aat:300028051 |
schema:publication →
<ndcbca12752244d88bd89cf82cdacaf8fb3>
|
schema:start |
"1999"^^schema:Date |
schema:publication →
<ndcbca12752244d88bd89cf82cdacaf8fb4>
|
schema:published |
Getty Conservation Institute |
schema:subjectOf →
<ndcbca12752244d88bd89cf82cdacaf8fb7>
| schema:text | Omslagtitel: Not all contemporary art will survive nor is it intended to. Is contemporary art only for contemporary times? No, most emphatically not. |
|
schema:additional |
aat:300435416 |
schema:subjectOf →
<ndcbca12752244d88bd89cf82cdacaf8fb8>
| schema:text | ill. |
|
schema:additional |
<http:/ |
schema:publication →
Los Angeles: Getty Conservation Institute; 1999
| schema:name | "Los Angeles: Getty Conservation Institute; 1999" |
schema:publication →
<ndcbca12752244d88bd89cf82cdacaf8fb2>
| schema:location | Los Angeles |
schema:publication :: schema:location →
Los Angeles
| schema:name | "Los Angeles" |
schema:publication :: schema:publishedBy →
Getty Conservation Institute
| schema:name | "Getty Conservation Institute" |