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...scenes of people falling off bicycles with newsreels of the airship Hindenburg burning and stacked bodies in a concentration camp. And tragedy, of course, emanates from Warhol's multiple images of Marilyn Monroe that are so emblematic of the Pop genre. Warhol incorporated tragedy more explicitly using the repeated, silk-screened image of a fatal auto accident in his Orange Car Crash, as if death, too, were a mass-produced consumer good...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Art Goes Pop | 4/2/2001 | See Source »

...Wanderlust and energy propelled Cruz to her current success. "I was dancing every day," says Cruz, who's seated in a makeup chair and being groomed by hair and cosmetic artists for a Ralph Lauren ad campaign. Here in a Los Angeles photography studio, she's wearing a red silk robe, with her knees gathered to her chest. "I was always studying dance, like three or four hours every night. We used to have bleeding feet, but they were so tough, the teachers. You'd say, 'Excuse me, I'm bleeding.' They'd say, 'Smile!' " She later took the same...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Penelope Cruz: Euro Star | 4/2/2001 | See Source »

...travelers and conquerors from the 3rd century A.D. onwards have marveled at the two towering Buddha statues of Bamiyan, in central Afghanistan. Hewn from sandstone cliffs, these two giants, 53 m and 35 m high, are a fusion of Classical Greek and Indian art that flourished along the ancient Silk Road. Despite their massive size, the standing Buddhas possess an ethereal lightness. It's as if they managed to levitate above a millennium of warfare and calamity that has plagued Afghanistan, at least until the fiercely Islamic Taliban rulers fixed the Buddhas in their gun-sights...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: 1) No Television
2) No Statues | 3/12/2001 | See Source »

...There is nothing like these statues anywhere in the world. Bamiyan is located in a beautiful valley around 230 km northwest of Kabul. It was an important stop on the fabled Silk Road, and the two majestic Buddha statues were scooped out of the Hindu Kush mountains in such a way that anyone - merchants, soldiers, pilgrims - moving along the highway could view them from afar and pay homage. The ceilings above the Buddhas had beautiful painted images of the bodhisattvas and the Sun God, representing the Buddha as the source of light. The iconography was a mixture of Greek...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Afghanistan's War on Artifacts | 3/7/2001 | See Source »

...Here is the author Sally Wriggins' description, in her book "Xuanzang, a Buddhist Pilgrim on the Silk Road," of what's been lost: "The first sight of the valley of the Great Buddha must have made weary travelers gasp - immense cliffs of a soft pastel color, and behind them indigo peaks dusted with snow, rising to a height of 20,000 feet. They saw the reddish cliffs in the cold, clear air; as they came closer, they could make out two gigantic statues of the Buddha standing in niches carved in the mountains. Closer still, they saw that...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Whose Art in Heaven? | 3/5/2001 | See Source »

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