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Today one is not apt to think of allegory as a "modern" form, since it contradicts the abstraction of modernist painting. But it mattered a great deal to Picasso, and he resorted to it at some of his intense moments???not only the death of Casagemas, but in the construction of Les Demoiselles d'Avignon (which began as an allegory of venereal disease, a subject of great interest to the energetic Pablo), of Guernica, and on into his "Mediterranean" subjects of the 1930s, with their bulls and horses, virgins and Minotaurs, caves, ruins and nymphs. Allegory was the conscious, intelligible...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: The Show of Shows | 5/26/1980 | See Source »

...behavior explicable. So is Jane Alexander as the edgy mouse of a bookkeeper whom Bernstein persuades to talk about the slush fund at the Committee for the Re-Election of the President. Penny Fuller and Lindsay Anne Grouse appear as newspaperwomen who help out with leads at key moments???the former dizzily, the latter with touching reluctance to betray a lost love...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Cinema: Watergate on Film | 3/29/1976 | See Source »

...show at the Winter Garden Theater* is called Follies, a title self-consciously suggesting irony and double meanings. At its worst moments, Follies is mannered and pretentious, overreaching for Significance. At its best moments???and there are many?it is the most imaginative and original new musical that Broadway has seen in years...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Show Business: The Once and Future Follies | 5/3/1971 | See Source »

Laborite Tom Shaw (interjecting) : "I may say, as the Secretary of State for India once said, in one of his sober moments???" (Pandemonium, furious shouts from friends of the Secretary, the Earl of Birkenhead, a discriminating, not a swizzling drinker...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Foreign News: Act II | 5/16/1927 | See Source »

...University of Chicago. And that, according to her, is the last thing she should have done to satisfy her pedagogic yearnings. All the professors, she found, were sexually predatory. Their wives drank cocktails, were migratory almost every night. The authorities demanded that the faculty?presumably in its soberer moments???confine itself to research laboratories. Even the student body was regarded not as boys and girls to be taught, but as a corpus vile, a collection of human guinea pigs tolerated for experimental purposes. Disillusioned, Joan left the campus, marched to the altar, departed for the fireside. The book...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: The Blind Bow-Boy* | 9/3/1923 | See Source »

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