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Word: madmanned (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
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...movie's lengthy, dutiful depictions of Jones' early years­as a child in Indiana, as a civil libertarian preacher in Indianapolis and the San Francisco area­provide too many unassimilated facts and details. There really is no point in recounting the minutiae of a madman's life if, after four hours, it is still impossible to understand how Jones became a sex-and-drug-crazed megalomaniac or why his misfit followers so easily accepted his larcenous and sadistic behavior...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Television: Ratings Gambit | 4/14/1980 | See Source »

...difference between a madman and me," Dali is often quoted as saying, "is that I am not mad." Indeed, he is not; and that is why the Pompidou Center is crowded. Dali's public hopes to meet a mind which fulfills its two ruling clichés about artists-the painter as old master (Raphael, Rubens) and the artist as freak (Van Gogh, Rimbaud). Dali gives his public a tacky, vivid caricature of both while fulfilling neither. No modern painter has armored himself more assiduously in mediocrity...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Art: The Soft Watch and the Beady Eye | 3/3/1980 | See Source »

Your cover will be reproduced in Iran on placards, in newspapers, on television and will become just one more piece of evidence that the madman of Qum is winning his war of wills with the American people...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Letters, Jan. 21, 1980 | 1/21/1980 | See Source »

...against the encroachment of modernism. Long after the Museum of Modern Art in New York became a going concern, Royal Academicians like Sir Alfred Munnings were still rising over their port at Academy banquets to denounce Cézanne as a fumbler and Van Gogh as a crop-eared madman. No doubt their offended ghosts are gibbering in the courtyard at the thought of all of Burlington House being turned over to the largest exhibition of early modern art ever mounted in Great Britain, with nine Cezannes, 13 Van Goghs, 14 Gauguins, twelve Seurats?in all, 428 works by 169 painters...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Art: Old Masters of the Modern | 1/14/1980 | See Source »

...last world to conquer. It is a lust to which overachievers have been notoriously susceptible, from Catherine the Great, who built Leningrad's incomparable Hermitage ("I am not a nibbler but a glutton") to U.S. Industrialist Joseph Hirshhorn, the great benefactor of the Smithsonian ("I have a madman's rage for art"). To be sure, such stupendous collectors and donors still make record purchases. But it is not the proud possessors who crowd the salesrooms and find bonanzas in baubles...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Going... Going... Gone! | 12/31/1979 | See Source »

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