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

  1. Stanley Abe. Duke University. Retrieved 13 June 2017.
  2. Ordinary Images, Stanley K. Abe. University of Chicago Press Books. Retrieved 13 June 2017.
  3. A Freer stela reconsidered / Stanley K. Abe. Trove, National Library of Australia. Retrieved 13 June 2017.


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