Word: exhibitable
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Dates: during 1980-1989
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...photographer may release pictures into the world for years. He may even win a bit of fame in the process. But it can take a survey show to make his full intentions clear. The Museum of Fine Arts in Houston last week opened a welcome exhibition that does just that for Joel Sternfeld, whose images of Americans contesting with their landscape began appearing in the late 1970s. The exhibit, which runs in Houston through June 7 and later moves on to Detroit and Baltimore, binds Sternfeld's work into a whole. Pictures that were once compelling oddities are now linked...
With thick dark bangs, a prissy hairstyle and a dire need for some face powder, Basinger doesn't look as good as usual, but she is a striking presence in her little red suit. Before the dinner, Nadia and Walter attend an art exhibit that will strike Northeasterners as very L.A., and he shyly asks her what a nice girl like her is doing with a free evening...
...camera gallery to gaze at a striking array of photographs: fireworks, an athlete in pain, the rings of Saturn, one space shuttle lifting off, another disintegrating in the air, a laughing Ronald Reagan, a gyrating Madonna, a city in flames. These and other dramatic images make up a new exhibit whose theme is TIME photojournalism of the 1980s...
...Gotti go free when other accused top mobsters took a fall? After hearing evidence for five months and deliberating for seven days, the jury asked to review a defense exhibit showing the criminal records of seven Government witnesses. Collectively, they had been convicted of nearly 70 crimes, including murder and drug trafficking. Apparently jury concluded that their testimony against Gotti was not believable. The jurors were tired, said Defense Attorney Cutler, of the prosecution's "regurgitating things said by paid witnesses who've lied in the past, witnesses who've sold drugs, witnesses who have killed people. They...
...First, we want to show something about the process of writing," said Houghton Manuscripts Cataloguer Elizabeth A. Falsey, who organized the exhibit. "Second, we want to show how one can draw conclusions about writing by its content," she said in her introduction to Updike's speech yesterday...