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Word: lithographer (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
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...closely related to reality. As eccentric as his creatures may be, they are beguiling and invite the viewer to escape into a never-ending carnival of unabashed hedonism. In their lush use of brilliant colors, Nolde's works are hypnotic. Nolde often camouflages macabre elements beneath slick colors. The lithograph series of a "Young Couple" (1913) features a red print. Unlike the figures in its green and blue counterparts, the red couple shares a chemistry that is palpably heated and sexual. Nolde's red is so freshly applied that it could be blood submerging the lovers...

Author: By Marco M. Spino, | Title: MFA Show Escapes To Nolde's Exotic World | 2/23/1995 | See Source »

...result of this court case and the images Philipon sketched, the pear became a widely-recognized satirical symbol of king Louis Philippe. Another pear image in exhibit is "Kindly Take Your Filth Elsewhere, You Brats!" by Auguste Bouquet. This colorful lithograph depicts children scribbling images of a pear on the wall of a woman's house. The woman leans out the window scolding the children. The piece's ambiguity as to whether "fifth" refers to the scribbling or to the king himself heightens the satiric impact...

Author: By Tara B. Reddy, | Title: Where Art, Politics And Humor Meet | 4/8/1993 | See Source »

Daumier's "It Sure Was Worth Getting Ourselves Killed" is a much more politically charged piece. This lithograph appeared as the last piece in "La Caricature," which ended publication in 1835 as ordered by the king's censors. The piece shows several figures rising from their graves. According to people who were killed in the Revolution, rising to assess the state of their country after their deaths. The work suggests the revolutionaries' sense of futility: upon looking at the world from the grave, the men see little change...

Author: By Tara B. Reddy, | Title: Where Art, Politics And Humor Meet | 4/8/1993 | See Source »

...early '80s, many consumers feel little need for rainy-day reserves. Karen Peters, 43, of Orange, Calif., earns $48,000 a year as a county executive but typically keeps less than $1,000 in savings. On a recent trip to Santa Fe, she dropped $3,000 on a lithograph and a turquoise necklace. Says Peters, a widow who spends a portion of her income to help support her mother, 67, and daughter, 21: "Having money in the bank doesn't do anything for me. I figure I owe it to myself to enjoy myself...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Fighting The Urge to Splurge | 12/14/1987 | See Source »

...took me to the most popular art exhibit in Leningrad, a cavernous hall filled with Latvian painting which stressed agricultural and industrial productivity. One picture depicted a truck overflowing with some fruit, and the subject of a towering lithograph was a factory full of men hard at work...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: From Russia With Doubts | 3/22/1984 | See Source »

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