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...figures, stuck in their social matrix as though in jam (especially given Kossoff's dense pigment) -- a pictorial equivalent, as it were, of the double meaning of the Hebrew word olam, which means world but also crowd. A painting like A Street in Willesden, 1985, reminds one of how pointless the stereotypes about English art have become. It is not anecdotal, witty, light or conversational. Rather, the opposite. In Kossoff, an obdurate grandeur of intention is coupled with a deep sense of cultural continuity. What other living painter can embed groups of figures in deep space with such conviction...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Art: A Tortoise Obsessed with Oily Stuff | 11/14/1988 | See Source »

...commitment to his work. Anything that demands this much of us cannot be casually dismissed. Too much, though, is streaked with irrelevancies: digressions and dubious stock footage; interviews with people who have no significant knowledge of Barbie's activities or are full of mind- numbing details about them; pointless sequences of Ophuls braving the anger of reluctant subjects or horseplaying with his crew...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Cinema: Bearding The Butcher of Lyons | 10/31/1988 | See Source »

When NBC showed off its no-nonsense journalism, the results were sometimes grating. After boxer Anthony Hembrick was disqualified for arriving late, reporter Wallace Matthews bulled into an inner room where Hembrick slouched disconsolate. Matthews thrust a microphone into the stricken youth's face while posing the perennial pointless question about how Hembrick felt. As soon as swimmer Matt Biondi was touched out for the gold by a hundredth of a second in the 100-meter butterfly, analyst John Naber nastily opined that Biondi "deserved the loss" because he had glided in rather than risk a final, choppy stroke that...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: No Time For the Poetry | 10/3/1988 | See Source »

...chairman of Washington's Center for the Study of the Viet Nam Generation. "Winter, ice and a dreadful uncertainty gnawing at you." At that time, less than a year after the Tet offensive, Americans were shocked by the stories and televised images of an increasingly bloody and, to many, pointless war in Southeast Asia. In university dorms and dining halls around the country, students endlessly discussed their overarching obsession: the draft and how to avoid it. "The stress was ungodly, enormous," says Wheeler. "Viet Nam meant death." It was in this highly charged atmosphere that J. Danforth Quayle, DePauw University...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: The Republicans: Greetings, You Have Been Selected | 8/29/1988 | See Source »

...between work and homelife, and the possibilities for flimflammery in employing three sets of twins. The author's ardent anti-Communism seems to have evolved into a world- weariness reminiscent of John le Carre, in which the two camps of the cold war are morally equivalent players of a pointless, deadly game...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Theater: London's Dry Season | 7/18/1988 | See Source »

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