143 resultados para Arts and Humanities(all)
Resumo:
This poetry collection moves from the narrator’s childhood in the marshes of Canada to her coming of age in a new, southern swamp in South Florida. Many of the poems use free verse as well as fairly recent poetic forms like the Golden Shovel and the Pecha Kucha. Others rely on wordplay and nonce forms. Influenced by Hector Veil Temperly, Matthew Zapruder, Dorothea Lasky, Laura Kasischke and Anne Carson, the poems often employ simple language in stream of consciousness, and oscillate between lyric and narrative. These poems are feverish creations inspired by the oracular tradition and induced by the psychic crush of modern life: depression of the body and mind, cultural paranoia, and the decline of nature. The reader is privy not only to the personal biography of the narrator, but also to the inner workings of the narrator’s mind as it encounters and interprets the world.
Resumo:
John Henry discusses his background and his work. Comments by Javier Hernández-Lichtl, CEO of Baptist West Kendall Hospital. Introduction by Carol Damien.
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Joel Perlman talks about his life and his evolution as an artist. Introduction by Carol Damian.
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Susan Stamberg talks about the cultural impacts of Ernest Hemingway, Georgia O'Keffe, Frank Sinatra, and Elia Kazan. Introduction by Dahlia Morgan.
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Cheech talks about Chicano art, his own art education and what led him to build his collection. Introduction by Dahlia Morgan.
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Tom Otterness talks about his background and the influences on his work. He answers questions about his work from the attendees. Comments by Melissa Levine. Introduction by Amy Pollack. Lecture held at the Avenue of the Arts at Florida International University.
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Ursula von Rydingsvard talks about her work and focuses her lecture on the process. Introduction by Carol Damian.
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Glenn Lowry talks about the state of affairs at the MoMA as well as some of the issues the museum faces. Introduction by Dahlia Morgan.