Stanley K. Abe
Stanley K. Abe is an art historian with Duke University and a specialist in Chinese art and Buddhist art. He received his BA, MA, and PhD from the University of California at Berkeley.[1] His book Ordinary images (2002) won the Freer Gallery/Smithsonian Institution: Shimada Prize.[2]
Selected publications
- Ordinary images. University of Chicago Press, Chicago, 2002. ISBN 9780226000442
- A Freer stela reconsidered. Freer Gallery of Art and Arthur M. Sackler Gallery Occasional Paper, 2002.[3]
- "To avoid the inscrutable: Abstract Expressionism and the "Oriental Mode"." In Discrepant Abstraction, Ed. K. Mercer, MIT Press, 2006. pp. 52-73. ISBN 026263337X
gollark: ARM is RISC, or at least nominally.
gollark: Qualcomm stuff is somewhat less power-efficient. Apple is just very good at this somehow.
gollark: It's not *just* it being ARM.
gollark: But there is absolutely no chance that they have developed something 3 times faster at single-threaded workloads than the already rather good M1.
gollark: I think they have 8 high performance cores versus 4 or so before, so it is at least plausibly somewhat over twice as powerful at that.
References
- Stanley Abe. Duke University. Retrieved 13 June 2017.
- Ordinary Images, Stanley K. Abe. University of Chicago Press Books. Retrieved 13 June 2017.
- A Freer stela reconsidered / Stanley K. Abe. Trove, National Library of Australia. Retrieved 13 June 2017.
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