Word: exhibitable
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Dates: during 1980-1989
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Starting with one of Hutchence's very first scenes, in which he shakes dust out of his overgrown locks, he is a brooding, inarticulate animal. He is utterly uninteresting as an actor, and only in the film's final scene as he sings "Rooms for the Memory" does he exhibit the sensuality and vitality that make him an outstanding lead singer. By that point in the movie, however, it's too little too late...
...persuasive new exhibit that is now at New York City's Museum of Modern Art is going to change that. Curator Peter Galassi has mounted 90 photographs that Cartier-Bresson, 79, took at the outset of his career, mostly from 1932 through 1934. During those years he put aside his ambitions as a painter and began stalking the streets of three continents with a lightweight Leica and a potent surrealist intuition, an eye for the unearthly subtext of ordinary scenes. Add his powerful gift for spatial arrangement, and the result, says Galassi, is "one of the great, concentrated episodes...
...figure leaping across a puddle behind the Gare St.-Lazare, Mexican prostitutes popping weirdly out of doorway slots. Galassi is not the first to cite surrealism as the force that conferred upon this early work its compelling strangeness, but he makes the decisive case. By the end of this exhibit's seven-city tour -- it goes to Detroit, Chicago, San Diego, Framingham, Mass., Houston and Ottawa through May 1989 -- no one will be able to look again at these pictures without seeing how they hold reality at just the right angle to be read as a dream...
Most Undergraduate Council campaign posters proudly exhibit artistic and Mac-processed graphics in green, yellow or pink: dinosaurs, a child, photos. But on the typical motley bulletin board in Adams C entry lies a different brand of flyer...
...expected to find a sign or exhibit, some concrete acknowledgement that once blacks were enslaved there, bound up and put down there. And I expected the sign to say that was bad. But there was no sign, only a small marker near some small shacks. "This is where the slaves slept," it read...