Search Details

Word: knife (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
Dates: all
Sort By: most recent first (reverse)


Usage:

...Edith was met by Emil Stengelé, a wealthy Zurich art-gallery owner who has bought the many paintings she made in prison for exhibition later this month. Her time behind bars revealed Edith's tough side: she disarmed an inmate who was attacking a guard with a knife. In June, she plans to pick up her two sons from Clifford, who is on parole in Manhattan, and take them to live with her in Ibiza. "Clifford and I plan to get a divorce," she said. "It has nothing to do with the Hughes affair but is a normal...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: People, May 13, 1974 | 5/13/1974 | See Source »

...political content is laughable: the only idea embodied by Jimmy Cliff is something along the lines of "You Can Get It If You Really Want (but you must try, try, try...)." It's hard to know whether the cardboard villains are foiled by capitalistic perseverance, a few wellplaced macho knife slashes, or the kind of depressing mysticism that responds to oppression by chanting "forgive them Lord they know not what they do (oo-wah-oo)." Although the theme is similar, and the music also the focal point, the 44 minutes of A Well Spent Life, which precede The Harder They...

Author: By Richard Turner, | Title: THE SCREEN | 5/9/1974 | See Source »

This obsession led to an undeniable grandeur. An early composition like Still-Life: Bottles and Knife testifies to that. Tuned down to the subtlest inter play of gray over gray, unified by the stippled crust of Gris's opaque and polished pigment, these simple objects acquire the amplitude and severity of a Romanesque nave, and one realizes that when Gris used the word "architecture," he was not using a metaphor: the slanting displacement of the still life, as though seen through rolled glass, suggests a kind of response to structural loading-slippage, compression, shear. What Gris's work...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Art: Eminence Gris | 5/6/1974 | See Source »

...Knife, a freshly widowed father slips a much prayed-for knife under his small son's pillow to encourage him in the belief that prayers can be answered. Then, in anguish, he realizes that the boy is hopefully petitioning God for the return of his dead mother. In Something You Just Don't Do in a Club, a lawyer's starchy presumption of friendship and honor among his fellows sets him up to be cheerfully bilked by the club deadbeat. In Last Things, the longest and most affecting piece in the book, the indomitably optimistic and innocent...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Books: Seasons of the Heart | 5/6/1974 | See Source »

There were two especially nice solos, one a comic piece, the other a study of mood. In the first, Marcia Hanlon cooked "A Bun in the Oven" with such ecstasy that she couldn't resist kissing the floor and falling in love with her knife. In "Shawl Turning Dawn," Rylin Malone, very tall and beautiful, beckoned dawn in the Near East, accompanied by a wonderful flute...

Author: By Sarah M. Wood, | Title: Building From the Bottom | 4/30/1974 | See Source »

Previous | 367 | 368 | 369 | 370 | 371 | 372 | 373 | 374 | 375 | 376 | 377 | 378 | 379 | 380 | 381 | 382 | 383 | 384 | 385 | 386 | 387 | Next