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...course. Some Quant creations consisted of less material than a Victorian hanky and-at eleven inches above the knee-barely covered the area once reserved for underwear. On the way up from the pert Chelsea shopgirl look, the ultrashort skirt was given the imprimatur of couture by Parisian Designer André Courrèges in the middle '60s. The mini's bon voyage across the Atlantic was largely the work of Enfant Terrible Rudi Gernreich, who was not only the first U.S. designer to bare the thigh, but also earned dubious fame with his topless swimsuit...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Living: Return of the Mini | 3/22/1982 | See Source »

More damning was a paragraph in which Jones described an old blind man "chanting the Ramayana, a part of Cambodia's cultural heritage, as he twanged a primitive guitar." Cockburn produced an almost identical passage from André Malraux's novel about his Cambodian travels in 1923 and 1924, La Voie Royale. Reckoned the Voice writer...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Press: Hoax Hunt | 3/1/1982 | See Source »

...Greco's paintings, simultaneously vast and womblike, in his work after 1947. Because of his aspirations to sublimity, it is difficult to assimilate Pollock-as some authorities have wished to do-to the traditions of the School of Paris. The French painter he most admired, the surrealist André Masson, was set against the pre-eminently French virtues of lucidity, calm and mésure. An extraordinary number of strands are braided and involved in Pollock's work, from Indian sand painting to the theory of Jungian archetypes, from Zen calligraphy to El Greco, from American jazz...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Art: An American Legend in Paris | 2/1/1982 | See Source »

...like a child. It was one of the master's few unoriginal remarks Virginia Woolf, rereading Nicholas Nickleby in 1939, noted."Dickens owes his astonishing power to make characters alive to the fact that he saw them as a child sees them." And in his 1924 Surrealist Manifesto, André Breton declared, "Childhood is the nearest to true life...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Books: A World Charged with Miracles | 12/21/1981 | See Source »

Wallace and André, in short, are two Woody Allen characters in need of an intelligently ironic author to deflate them. Since he is no where to be found, audiences are advised to bring along their do-it-yourself satire kits...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Cinema: Small Bore | 10/26/1981 | See Source »

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