Word: colors
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Dates: during 1930-1939
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CONGRATULATIONS ON YOUR CORKING HEMINGWAY ARTICLE [TIME, Oct. 18]. JUST AS YOUR EXITING COLOR REPRODUCTIONS IN LIFE ARE FURTHERING THE CAUSE OF MODERN AMERICAN ART YOUR TIME ARTICLES ON SUCH GREAT WRITERS AS DOS PASSOS AND HEMINGWAY ARE WAKING THIS COUNTRY TO THE FACT THAT OUR CONTEMPORARY LITERATURE IS SOMETHING OF WHICH EVERY AMERICAN CAN BE INTENSELY PROUD I HATE TO QUIBBLE BUT LAST TIME I WAS IN HEMINGWAY'S HOME IN KEY WEST I DEFINITELY SAW THREE SONS TRUE WE HAD TAKEN ON BOARD A QUANTITY OF HEMINGWAY'S SUPERB IRISH WHISKEY, BUT SURELY NOT ENOUGH...
...with a year of preparatory training similar to that at the old Bauhaus but taking in new plastics and new advances in scientific knowledge. After that there will be three years of technical and practical work in any one of six divisions: 1) wood, metal, plastics; 2) textiles; 3) color in decoration; 4) light, photography, typography, cinema; 5) glass, clay, stone; 6) display, staging. A diploma from one of these courses will entitle a student to proceed with two years of architecture. Chicagoans, impressed by Director Moholy-Nagy's long-renowned versatility, energy and pleasant manners, thought the success...
...reflected too much editorial bias. His remedy will be reversion to the classic neutrality of juxtaposed newspaper comment which characterized the Literary Digest of the late '20s when it had 1,400,000 circulation. Beginning Nov. 13 the Literary Digest's, cover will appear bedecked in action color photographs. Its interior will contain: 1) a review of the week's news, 2) special articles and big-name features, 3) something called "Reading around the world." Says Boss Havell: "Presidential polls...
...those long pink dresses with icing and forgetmenots around the neck, and she's got a green orchid strapped around her middle. She's got big feet and her hair starts from her head and goes out like the Japanese rising sun. The same color, too. I don't do anything, I just stand there and look. If she'd had on glasses I'd have hollered. And then I slunk out quiet-like...
With wall coverings of quiet color and a restful lighting a more natural setting than that of the usual museum gallery has been achieved. Most important of all, however, is the fact that the arrangement, and at times the choice, of the exhibits has been planned not so much for study as for enjoyment. Such principles are all in line with recent tendencies in the presentation of paintings or of decorative subjects, but their application to a long-established classical collection in something of a departure...