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Word: hodgkins (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
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...Carnivores, consider this: women ages 55 to 69 who eat more than 36 servings of RED MEAT a month appear to have a 70% greater risk of developing non-Hodgkin's lymphoma than those who consume less than 22 servings...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Notebook: May 13, 1996 | 5/13/1996 | See Source »

DIED. SAUL BASS, 75, graphic designer who turned opening-credit sequences in movies into brilliant minimalist films; of non-Hodgkin's lymphoma; in Los Angeles...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Milestones May 6, 1996 | 5/6/1996 | See Source »

Since the late 1960s, Hodgkin's images have had a pronounced architectural character, influenced by Fernand Leger's "tubism" as well as by Vuillard. Grantchester Road, 1975, is an interior with a fireplace, and the indoor plants are of the same pictorial species as the green spreading palms in Hodgkin's Indian paintings. The separation of room and gaze gives Hodgkin's work its basic trope, that of peeping and peering--from culture (the room) into nature (everything else) and back again. It's not about seeing here and now but about the memory of having seen; not complete...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: ART: DELIGHT FOR ITS OWN SAKE | 1/22/1996 | See Source »

...Hodgkin's complete originality is in his color, which, as art historian Michael Auping says in the catalog, "has a strange quality of simultaneously seeming totally invented, yet completely natural." Its reds and lemon yellows, its blackened viridians and fiercely luminous blues, its swoony Whistlerian grays are like no other color in modern painting. They give his work a perverse to-and-fro between the intimate and the operatic--Aida done in a marionette theater. Such color isn't just showy. It can be extremely tender, intelligently seductive, in the way that art has every right to be. It also...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: ART: DELIGHT FOR ITS OWN SAKE | 1/22/1996 | See Source »

DIED. DUANE HANSON, 70, sculptor; of non-Hodgkin's lymphoma; in Boca Raton, Florida. Hanson's popular, Pop-influenced sculptures captured humanity at its most humdrum--a gawking tourist or a burdened shopper, each life-size, dressed in real clothing and rendered with such realism that passers-by were often unaware they were in the company of art, not life...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Milestones Jan. 22, 1996 | 1/22/1996 | See Source »

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