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...With Matisse painting rediscovered primary color: red, blue, yellow; colors he put down on the canvas right next to each other, vibrating wildly, with no concern for reality. By 1905 many Parisian critics still found the color combinations emerging from this Postimpressionist art peculiar. Matisse and his French followers, André Derain and Maurice de Vlaminck, were nicknamed les fauves (the wild beasts) because they painted lemon yellow and lime green skies above pea green seas upon which sailed geranium red boats. There was another wild color that these Fauves used: white. In Alfred Sisley's Impressionist view of Willows...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Prime Colors | 9/15/2002 | See Source »

...because all the greatest artists of the century were connected with it." With 500 paintings and sculptures, the show documents the whole range of Surrealism's vast output in pursuit of surprise and mystery. It even exhibits an entire wall from the Paris studio of Surrealism's ideological father, André Breton, hung with 44 years' worth of his bizarre memorabilia and his own collection of Rousseau, Kandinsky...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Surreal Dream Team | 9/10/2002 | See Source »

...opportunistic. Much as Capa held his camera only inches from the faces of the grief-stricken and the grievously wounded, Kershaw focuses - tightly and unblinkingly - on a man who "invented himself" and who was exposed to an excess of both joy and horror in his 41 years. Born André Friedmann in Budapest in 1913, Capa entered a world in conflict, between nations and between his parents. In his teens, André - poor, clever, bored, romantic at heart and discriminated against as a Jew - became involved with leftist revolutionaries, seeking out conflict and danger. When he was barely...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Robert Capa, in Focus | 6/30/2002 | See Source »

...feelings of insecurity are directly linked to immigration," Berthezène growls. "Immigrants who are here illegally and who cheat or commit crime will be expelled. They are costing us money and creating the trouble." With a handful of conservative candidates (including Beaucaire's rightist mayor, Jean-Marie André) and a largely united left behind Socialist incumbent Alain Fabre-Pujol challenging Berthezène, her march to parliament is far from assured. But the troubling allure of Berthezène, Le Pen and their fellow extremists frightens and perplexes many Gardois as much as lurking criminals do. Aware that...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: The Le Pen Effect | 6/2/2002 | See Source »

...pool of suitable candidates, which he estimates at about 30,000 in this predominantly Protestant country of 7.3 million. Now three recruiters are visiting the nation's military boot camps, Catholic parishes and seminaries, giving motivational talks about the benefits of serving in the Swiss Guard. One of them, André Wyss, retired head of recruitment for the Swiss Army, acknowledges that finding willing candidates is a difficult task. "Years ago, when Catholic families in Switzerland had many children, it was easier to fill the ranks," he says. "At times, there was even a waiting list. Now young people...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Keepers of the Faith | 5/26/2002 | See Source »

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