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Word: exhibited (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
Dates: during 1960-1969
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Usage:

...Museum of the National Liberation apparently graces every major town in Yugoslavia with vast 'You are there' exhibits of political cartoons, marionettes used in cabarets, tanks, rifles, grenades, and other memorabilia celebrating the victory of Tito's Partisans over the Nazis in 1945. Neither tourists nor citizens seem to visit these and the one in Ljubljana was no exception in this respect. Within the long marbled corridors and the impressive exhibit rooms were two people besides myself--the director and his secretary...

Author: By Michael S. Gruen, | Title: Notes From A Yugoslavian Journey | 10/16/1961 | See Source »

Until the present century, it was often a rather risky business for an American artist to do a nude. When the painter John Vanderlyn exhibited an inoffensive Ariadne in New York in 1815, his great rival John Trumbull was able to stir up enough scandalized protests almost to ruin poor Vanderlyn forever. When William Page tried to exhibit his 1862 Venus in Boston, there was such an outcry that the painting was whisked from public view. At the Pennsylvania Academy of the Fine Arts, where on Ladies' Day the Greek statues were draped, the great Thomas Eakins posed...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Art: Shy About the Nude | 10/13/1961 | See Source »

Most often, of course, the CRIMSON is considered as holding and exercising unorthodox viewpoints. In my opinion this is good, and the CRIMSON is highly enjoyable because of it. But I find it not to the credit of the CRIMSON to exhibit a policy which is not far short of ridiculous...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: A FRIEND OF HOLLYWOOD | 10/11/1961 | See Source »

PAUL SCHUSTER ART GALLERY: An exhibit of engravings and etchings of the fifteenth through nineteenth centuries, from a private collections. Through Oct. 14 at 134 Mt. Auburn...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: WEEKL CALENDAR | 10/6/1961 | See Source »

...scholar this kind of exhibit is fine; for the person who visits a museum merely to see some nice pictures it is fine. But for the person who views the world as the Bauhaus did--in terms of unity, it is hard to imagine how the museum's directors could ignore an opportunity to show, among other things, how Kandinsky's abstract expressionism has led to such things as Jackson Pollack's dribblings, how Moholy-Nagy's geometry has led to Mark Rothko's squares within squares, and, most important of all, how the Bauhaus attempt to unify the visual...

Author: By Michael S. Gruen, | Title: Artists of the Bauhaus | 10/5/1961 | See Source »

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