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Word: de (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
Dates: during 1930-1939
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Usage:

...Italy," wrote Critic Give Bell last April in The London Studio, "has not produced a great painter since Canaletto" (1697-1768), but before Canaletto Italy produced enough great painters for all time. To set forth the latter fact spectacularly to France and the world seemed to Henry de Jouvenel, brilliant French diplomat, journalist and Italophile, an admirable way for Italy and France to clasp hands more tightly against Adolf Hitler. Last week he had assembled in Paris' Petit Palais a collection of Italian old masters that was in fact "the greatest the world has ever seen...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Art: All the Italians | 5/27/1935 | See Source »

...choicest plum for a U. S. art student who is unmarried and not over 30 is the Prix de Rome. It gives the winner two idyllic years at the American Academy in Rome, is worth about $4,000. In 1912 one of the winners was Eugene Francis Savage, a graduate of Gonzaga College in Washington, D. C., who painted "sanitary," hard-profiled. Italianate pictures. They showed just what the Prix de Rome conditions asked for: "A keen understanding of the qualities which give to the classics . . . their universal appeal, of the technical methods by which those qualities were secured...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Art: Yale's Party | 5/27/1935 | See Source »

Yale School once more swept the Prix de Rome with three winners, losing only the award in landscape architecture, not a Yale specialty...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Art: Yale's Party | 5/27/1935 | See Source »

Last week Winners Green, Proctor and Lister went to Manhattan to be with their winning entries in the Prix de Rome show at the Grand Central Art Galleries. Confronted with a microphone they spoke a few words of modest thankfulness for the two idyllic years ahead...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Art: Yale's Party | 5/27/1935 | See Source »

Left. By the late Alfred Irénée du Pont, reorganizer and onetime head of E. I. du Pont de Nemours & Co. (TIME, May 6): an estate estimated as high as $100,000,000; in Jacksonville, Fla. To his third wife, Mrs. Jessie Ball du Pont, go $200,000 a year, his Florida estate, "Epping Forest," his art collection, his yachts. To his four children and a brother-in-law executor, 5,000 shares each in his personal holding company, Almours Securities Inc. To other relations and retainers, securities and annuities. Income from the bulk of the estate...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Milestones, May 27, 1935 | 5/27/1935 | See Source »

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