Word: lindas
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...York Times Supreme Court reporter Linda J. Greenhouse ’68 was awarded a plaque and a personalized chair in recognition of “excellence in journalism” at a ceremony last night at the Kennedy School’s John F. Kennedy Jr. Forum...
...visitors who can prise themselves away from Mike Parr, filmed sewing his face together in a kind of grimacing death mask, there's Adam Geczy's video elegy for the Port Arthur massacre, and TV footage of the Moscow theater siege glimpsed through the living-room curtains of Linda Wallace's installation Entanglements, 2004. Then there's the wicked whack of Destiny Deacon's bloodied boomerang in her enlarged Polaroid, My Boomerang Did Come Back, 2003. So do the images in this powerful survey - which goes to show that photography isn't dead. It's just got nine lives...
...often with little fondness, as Muzak. The story centers on Burt, a trumpeter whose work is only appreciated tangentially in elevators and barbershops. He has aspirations of playing professional jazz, but is unable to come to grips with natural flair for nerdiness. A miracle arrives in the form of Linda, who admires his playing and eventually allows him to embrace his EZ listening roots. Tickets $9. 7:30 p.m. Coolidge Corner Theatre, 290 Harvard St., Brookline...
...meutre and the gender of bathing,” this is the third lecture in the continuing “Bathers, Bodies, Beauty : the Visceral Eye” series at Sanders Theatre. The talk will look at the impressionist representation of women and their place in art history. Lecturer Linda Nochlin is a Professor of Modern Art at NYU’s Institute of Fine Arts and specializes in the art of the 19th and 20th centuries. Part of the critically acclaimed Norton lecture series. Admission free. 4 p.m., doors opens at 3:30. Sanders Theatre...
LECTURE | Norton lectures: Manet’s Le bain and the death of the historic landscape As part of an ongoing series entitled “Bathers, Bodies, Beauty: The Visceral Eye,” art historian Linda Nochlin, the Lila Acheson Wallace Professor of Modern Art at NYU’s Institute of Fine Arts, will speak on the death of the historic landscape. She specializes in the art of the 19th and 20th centuries, particularly in the work of Gustave Courbet and the Impressionists, as well as the representation of women and the work of women artists...