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...coordinator of the Business Club'sproject board, Dimitar J. Genov '94, saidrelations between the club and its new rival arebecoming more friendly, and Hart said he looksforward to closer links...

Author: By Jonathan A. Lewin, | Title: Ethics Charges Mar Business Club Split | 9/29/1993 | See Source »

...beginning, such drama lay primarily in the camera's power to capture and freeze a random instant in time. But with the arrival of motion pictures, the telephoto lens, journalistic photography and television, the camera has developed a new vocabulary of images. Spain's Juan Genovès, 37, calls it "graphic language, the language of the photographer." In his show at London's Marlborough Fine Art Gallery, he illustrates the chilling resources open to the artist who has learned to parse it for his own artistic ends...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Art: Through a Giant Lens | 3/3/1967 | See Source »

...Genovès' subject is the individual pinpointed by the camera in the middle of a crowd. Relying for inspiration on sheaves of photographs and films, he creates shadowy monochromatic canvases filled with silhouettes of dozens of tiny people running, fighting, pathetic, but defiant. Sometimes, beneath the shadow of an unseen airplane, his people stream across an open plaza routed from a riot, or perhaps in some more existential form of flight. Other canvases are composed of a series of panels reminiscent of a strip of movie film or contact prints: La Protesta (the Protest), for example, shows...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Art: Through a Giant Lens | 3/3/1967 | See Source »

...When Genovès washes his paintings in green or brown, it seems as though his lenses were equipped with filters. He also employs photography's "zoom lens." Enlargement shows a fleeing crowd on the left; at the right, the eye zeroes in on one figure spotlighted from the mass. Positive. Negative uses another photographic device, showing a slain black couple on a white field, their arms reaching toward their mirror image, a slain white couple on a black background...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Art: Through a Giant Lens | 3/3/1967 | See Source »

...Though Genovès lives and works in suburban Madrid, he does not consider his work a critique of the Franco regime. "I want to be a universal painter," he says. "What I am trying to show is that a multitude is not an anonymous mass, but a collection of individuals who would, in an ideal world, each be authentically free...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Art: Through a Giant Lens | 3/3/1967 | See Source »

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