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Tag Archives: cubism
The Arts Seen in NYC (Fabulous Picasso Sculpture Edition)
Well the Missus and I trundled down to the Big Town the other week and say, it was swell. Our artinery: Friday We started out at the Museum of Arts and Design and – yes – we were MAD about the … Continue reading
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Tagged Aelita: Queen of Mars, African Princess clock, Alexander Rodchenko, American Folk Art Museum, Ancient Egypt Transformed: The Middle Kingdom, Andy Warhol, Arkady Shaikhet, Art Brut in America: The Incursion of Jean Dubuffet, artinery, Émile Zola, Becoming Jewish: Warhol’s Liz and Marilyn, Ben Brantley, Catalan Noucentismo, Clive Owen, Collection de l'Art Brut, cubism, Dead Treez, Douglas Hodge, Ebony G. Patterson, El Lissitzky, Elizabeth Taylor, Evan Cabnet, Eve Best, Harold Pinter, Jackson Pollock: A Collection Survey 1934–1954, Jacqueline de Ribes The Art of Style, Jean Dubuffet, Jean-Baptiste-André Furet, Jewish Museum, Joaquín Torres-García, Keira Knightley, Kelly Reilly, Kongo: Power and Majesty, MAD, Marilyn Monroe, Max Penson, Metropolitan Museum of Art, MOMA, Museum of Arts and Design, Museum of Modern Art, Neo-Plasticism, New York Times, Old Times, Picasso Sculpture, Roundabout Theatre Company, shabbes elevator, Soldier Spectre Shaman: The Figure and the Second World War, Studio 54, Thérèse Raquin, The Luxury of Time, The Met, The Power of Pictures: Early Soviet Photography Early Soviet Film, The Red Flame, Time Has No Shadows, Ultraism-Vibrationism, Unorthodox, Valeska Soares, Wendell Castle, Wendell Castle Remastered
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Dead Blogging ‘Alfred Maurer’ at Addison Gallery
Well the Missus and I trundled up to Andover yesterday to catch Alfred Maurer: At the Vanguard of Modernism at the Addison Gallery of American Art and, say, it was swell. Maurer was an early 20th Century artist who morphed from … Continue reading
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Tagged Addison Gallery of American Art, Alfred Maurer, Alfred Maurer: At the Vanguard of Modernism, Boston Globe, cubism, fauvism, Henri Matisse, impressionism, Light/Dark White/Black, On the Scene: 20th Century Street Photography, Searching for the Real, Sebastian Smee
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Travels With The Missus On The Côte d’Azur
Well the Missus and I trundled over to the French Riviera for our 30th wedding anniversary (and to walk in the footsteps of Alicia Markova in advance of the Missus’ forthcoming book), and here’s how it went . . . … Continue reading
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Tagged AC Hotel Nice, Air France, Alain Jacquet, Alicia Markova, Arman, Azur Alive, Béatrice Ephrussi de Rothschild, Beaulieu-sur-Mer, Bella, BNP Paribas, Brand Zombies, Cannes, Cannesterprise, Côte d'Azur, Côte of Arms, Christian Estrosi, Cimitière du Château, City of Light Service, Cocteau Chapel, cubism, David Ogilvy, Dejeuner sur l'herbe, Duke Ellington, Ephrussi de Rothschild Villa & Gardens, Eze Village, French Riviera, Henri Matisse, Jardin Maréchal Juin, Jean Cocteau, Joseph Garibaldi, L'Atrium, La Comédie Humaine, La Tête Carrée, Lignes d'Azur, Lionel Hampton, Lomography, Lonely Planet, Louis Armstrong, Manet, Marc Chagall, Miles Davis, multi-schmucker, Musée Chagall, Musée D'Art Moderne et D'Art Contemporain, Musée des Beaux-Arts, Musée Masséna, Musée Matisse, Muséum d'Histoire Naturelle de Nice, Orly Airport, Palais Lascaris, Paris, Place Masséna, Promenade des Anglais, Rade de Villefranche-sur-Mer, Robert Delauney, Roissy Charles de Gaulle, Sacha Sosno, seven statues, Sol Lewitt, sports facility, St. Jean Cap Ferrat, stay.com, The Making of Markova, Tina Sutton, tram system, tubism, Utrip, Villefranche-sur-Mer, Virus Compris, Wall Street Journal
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