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Edouard Vuillard and Paul Gauguin are an odd couple: one famous for his depictions of drawn-curtain bourgeois interiors, the other for bare-breasted Polynesian reveries. But the link between them is direct. In 1889, Vuillard joined a band of fellow art students who called themselves Les Nabis - "prophets" in Hebrew and Arabic. Their credo was "the simplification of form and the exaltation of color," and their guru was Gauguin. Now, the two artists are sharing the same roof, in a superb pair of exhibits at the Grand Palais that round off a blockbuster fall art season in Paris...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Paris Collections | 9/28/2003 | See Source »

...celebrate special events, such as births or weddings. Here at Harvard, the luau is a time for Hawaii natives and enthusiasts to join with members of the commmunity in a celebration of Hawaiian culture. The evening includes an assortment of traditional Hawaiian food, island music, and a show featuring Polynesian song and dance. Saturday, March 15, at  8:00 p.m. Tickets $10, available at the Harvard Box Office or by phone at (617) 496-2222. Quincy House Dining Hall...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Listings, March 14-20 | 3/14/2003 | See Source »

Third, otherwise robust societies can be dragged down by the environmental problems of their trade partners. About 500 years ago, two Polynesian societies, on Henderson Island and Pitcairn Island, vanished because they depended for vital imports on the Polynesian society of Mangareva Island, which collapsed from deforestation. We Americans can well understand that outcome, having seen how vulnerable we are to instability in oil-exporting countries of the Middle East...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Lessons from Lost Worlds | 8/26/2002 | See Source »

DIED. THOR HEYERDAHL, 87, unorthodox Norwegian adventurer-anthropologist who in 1947 sailed the Kon-Tiki, a tiny balsa raft, from Peru to an island near Tahiti in an attempt to prove his unorthodox theory that the Polynesian Islands could have been settled by prehistoric Peruvians, not by Southeast Asians; of brain cancer; on the Italian Riviera. The so-called Kon-Tiki man did not sway scholars, who dismissed him as an amateur, but his 4,300-mile, 101-day journey across the Pacific riveted the public, spawning his internationally best-selling memoir, Kon-Tiki, and an Oscar-winning documentary...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Milestones Apr. 29, 2002 | 4/29/2002 | See Source »

...first brush with television fame—and with a pre-”Felicity” Keri Russell—as I sat in on a taping of “The Mickey Mouse Club.” The festivities at my ninth birthday party included a Polynesian luau at one of the Disney resort hotels. In fifth grade I represented my school as a recipient of a Disney Dreamer and Doer award for displaying Walt’s favorite characteristics of curiosity, courage, constancy and confidence. I survived my first “camping” experience...

Author: By Kristin E. Kitchen, CRIMSON STAFF WRITER | Title: The Second Most Magical Place on Earth | 2/21/2002 | See Source »

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