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...artists in general. His bronze Death's Head, 1943, is the perfect image for the show's beginning: a cannonball of impacted death, heavier than any imaginable head. Massacre in Korea, 1951, asserts continuity by quoting Goya and thus morosely pointing out that the disasters of war only recur. The cluster of gun barrels leveled at the weeping women comes directly out of Goya's The Third of May. They are fantasy weapons, more like ray guns than rifles. Their odd shapes, and the robotic look of the soldiers, suggest that Picasso had also been looking at American...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: ART: RISING FROM THE RUINS | 6/26/1995 | See Source »

...that, problems such as the recent uproar over pension cuts and changes in health insurance for the Faculty of Arts and Sciences will probably recur as the president is forced to trim budgets and allocate what he terms increasingly scarce resources...

Author: By Jonathan N. Axelrod, | Title: Rudenstine Returns Today | 2/23/1995 | See Source »

Morocco would change Delacroix profoundly. For the next 30 years, the last half of his life, images from "the land of lions and leather," as he called it in a letter from Meknes, would recur in his work, meeting and dictating its needs; the innumerable drawings and watercolors he made there, along with the dense and (to a modern eye) almost cinematic impressions he jotted down in his journal, were a permanent resource he could draw from. Delacroix had already made a brilliant name for himself with "Oriental" subjects, including his Byronic denunciation of Turkish barbarity in Greece, The Massacres...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: ART: Drinking the Color | 1/9/1995 | See Source »

...congressional hearing, Dr. Jay Katz, a bioethicist at Yale University, said, "It is not the patient who may be anxious but the researcher, who has to look the patient straight in the eye and say, 'I want you to participate in an experiment in which your old symptoms may recur...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Madness in Fine Print | 11/7/1994 | See Source »

Aspects of the work of older American artists recur in Porter's work: Marsden Hartley's love of bony mass, Edward Hopper's treatment of light. But there were very great differences. Porter was a more nuanced and daring colorist than Hartley; his world is more lyric than Hopper's, and on the whole untouched by melancholy. It is also more generalized in treatment. In a large painting like Island Farmhouse, 1969, the white weatherboard asserts itself in a blast of light like a Doric temple; the lines of shadow are a burning visionary yellow; everything, from the angular...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Art: Fairfield Porter: Yankee Against the Grain | 7/12/1993 | See Source »

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