The Greenwich Village Bookshop Door
http://dbpedia.org/resource/The_Greenwich_Village_Bookshop_Door an entity of type: Thing
The Greenwich Village Bookshop Door (1920–25) separated the back office from the main area of Frank Shay's Bookshop in Greenwich Village from 1920 until 1925, where it served as an autograph book for nearly two hundred and fifty authors, artists, publishers, poets, and Bohemian creatives. Notable signatories include Upton Sinclair, the Provincetown Players, John Sloan, Susan Glaspell, Theodore Dreiser, and Sinclair Lewis. The door has been held in the permanent collections of the Harry Ransom Center at the University of Texas at Austin since it was purchased in 1960.
rdf:langString
rdf:langString
The Greenwich Village Bookshop Door
rdf:langString
The Greenwich Village Bookshop Door
xsd:integer
71931107
xsd:integer
1118904000
rdf:langString
Image of a thin door painted blue except for two rectangles in the middle. There are ink signatures covering it.
xsd:integer
242
rdf:langString
Frank Shay
xsd:integer
76
rdf:langString
in
rdf:langString
Pine, paint, ink
rdf:langString
cm
rdf:langString
right
rdf:langString
The Greenwich Villager, 1921
rdf:langString
The Saturday Review, 1960
<second>
22.0
rdf:langString
"It is true that Greenwich Village is an anomaly. To the pseudo-artist it is a Sargasso Sea, a cess-pool of lost effort and alluring but unkept promises. To the sincere student of art or literature it is America's greatest proving ground...in all this great United States it is the only place a person can sport a stocking with a hole in the heel, and an idea. Elsewhere both are taboo."
rdf:langString
The Greenwich Village Bookshop Door
xsd:integer
24
xsd:integer
1920
rdf:langString
The Greenwich Village Bookshop Door (1920–25) separated the back office from the main area of Frank Shay's Bookshop in Greenwich Village from 1920 until 1925, where it served as an autograph book for nearly two hundred and fifty authors, artists, publishers, poets, and Bohemian creatives. Notable signatories include Upton Sinclair, the Provincetown Players, John Sloan, Susan Glaspell, Theodore Dreiser, and Sinclair Lewis. The door has been held in the permanent collections of the Harry Ransom Center at the University of Texas at Austin since it was purchased in 1960.
xsd:nonNegativeInteger
41900