Word: exhibited
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Dates: during 1950-1959
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...exhibit of prints by two local artists at the Behn-Moore Gallery reflects some of the developments taking place in the print medium. The influence of painters, more and more of whom are devoting themselves to this medium, is felt in the trend of contemporary prints to rival paintings in their size and use of color. In this connection, some of Bill Martin's expressionistic woodcuts are even larger than average canvases...
...work of Janet Doub included in this exhibit contrasts a feminine concern for detail with Martin's bold masculinity. This is especially evident in her drawings, which are well executed, orderly and sensitive. Several of these take as their subject the interior of Miss Doub's living quarters, a preoccupation she shares with Van Gogh and Matisse...
...bore the proud legend: "1945-1955-ten years of work for a free and respected fatherland.' Inside, at the biggest industrial fair in Italian history, were the results of Italy's postwar labors, helped by some $3 billion in U.S. funds. Stretching over 100 acres were futuristic exhibit halls and brightly painted booths of 9,400 Italian firms-and 4,000 foreign companies that wanted to sell in Italy's expanding markets. In the two weeks of the fair, some 4,250,000 visitors crowded the grounds, 89,720 of them foreigners or foreign buyers. What they...
...Just a Chevvy," dreamed one young man as he elbowed his way toward the solid gold Chevrolet display, which commemorated G.M.'s fifty millionth vehicle. Meanwhile, another worshipper who already owned one of the fifty million asked the way to the Oldsmobile exhibit, and a man who had driven to the show in an Olds spent his time in the Cadillac section of the hall. He couldn't take his eyes off the $15,000 model. One was crmine-lined; another had a television set, telephone, and tape recorder in the back seat. The man was so absorbed...
...main theme of the G.M. poet laureate was that General Motors had the power--power in the brakes and steering on exhibit and hundreds of horses of power in every engine. None of the enraptured Bostonians would deny that G.M. had the power; in fact, they took a pilgrim's pride in it. From the admiration on their faces, one saw that General Motors also had the glory--forever and ever, one might add, after looking at the children no less transfixed...