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There’s a new painting up in the modern and contemporary gallery of the Fogg. Or perhaps “painting” is too strong a word. The 2001 work, Dorian Gray by the American artist Martin Kline, at first glance looks remarkably like a gigantic black mud splat. Kline used encaustic, a pasty wax-based paint, to make this work, and the result is a highly textured oval mound of pigment, roughly the shape and convexity of a shield, that juts forward close to three inches from the center of the board. The board itself...

Author: By Julian M. Rose, CONTRIBUTING WRITER | Title: A Tale of Two Paintings | 12/17/2004 | See Source »

...indeed Pollock’s most important legacy to younger artists, then in Kline’s case we can certainly say that the pupil has surpassed the master. Looking at a Pollock, you might be vaugely disturbed by it’s aggressive materiality, but looking at Kline, I have to say I was positively repulsed. There is something uncannily biological about the pattern of deep crevices and protruding nubs of encaustic that build up its mounded surface. It reminds me of a giant fungus-—if I reached out and touched it, I don?...

Author: By Julian M. Rose, CONTRIBUTING WRITER | Title: A Tale of Two Paintings | 12/17/2004 | See Source »

Coordinator of events and programs at the CSWR Rebecca Kline described the event as both “a devotional experience educational one.” Several Divinity school students and members of their community led a sharing circle to describe the meaning of the holiday and the events to take place...

Author: By Mary CATHERINE Brouder, CONTRIBUTING WRITER | Title: Day of the Dead Hits Harvard’s Halloween Revelers | 11/5/2004 | See Source »

...Kline said she was pleased overall. The event was entirely student coordinated, led by Divinity School student Maria Christina Vlassidas, and the CSWR has been trying to “encourage students at the Divinity school to use our space both for their own worship and for others to learn about our different religious customs and beliefs,” she said...

Author: By Mary CATHERINE Brouder, CONTRIBUTING WRITER | Title: Day of the Dead Hits Harvard’s Halloween Revelers | 11/5/2004 | See Source »

Allen, then, has been much married. To Anthony Hopkins' Nixon in Nixon. To Daniel Day-Lewis' John Proctor in The Crucible. To Kevin Kline's cheating spouse in The Ice Storm, to John Travolta's FBI agent in Face/Off and to William H. Macy's George in Pleasantville. Not the worst husbands in the world, but, sheesh, enough. Allen would never say "sheesh," but she put her foot down. "More than anything, I felt like the vein had collapsed--like if you were a junkie," she says of the spousal roles. "There's no more to give...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Movies: A Supremacy All Her Own | 8/9/2004 | See Source »

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