Locals expected to challenge for titles
Not a lot may change from the 2009-2010 winter track season to the 2010-2011 edition. And that would be just fine for a large number of area track programs. Track and field, particularly indoors, is one of those sports that is dominated by area teams – look at the results from last year's class meets, and they were dominated by the girls and boys teams of Bishop Guertin, Merrimack and Nashua …
Read more on The Nashua Telegraph
NYC – Bryant Park: Gertrude Stein statue
Image by wallyg
One of five sculptures in Bryant Park, this statue honors the trailblazing American author and arts patron Gertrude Stein (1874–1946). Installed in 1992, this casting is based on a model made by Jo Davidson in Paris in 1923. Its proximity to the New York Public Library reflects Stein's significant literary contributions—from plays, librettos, and film scripts to biographies, autobiographies, lectures, essays, poems, and novels.
Born in Allegheny, Pennsylvania, Stein was the granddaughter of German-Jewish immigrants. Her father Daniel made a fortune in street-railroads and real estate. Stein spent her early childhood in Vienna and Paris before moving with her family to Oakland, California. She studied psychology with the famous psychologist and philosopher William James at Radcliffe College in Boston and conducted laboratory experiments there with Hugo Munsterberg. Stein nearly completed a medical degree at Johns Hopkins University, but in 1903 she chose to settle in Paris with her brother Leo, where they befriended Pablo Picasso and became champions of avant garde writers, musicians, and artists, including many early Cubist painters.
Stein's early literary endeavors were inspired by the spatial concepts explored in Cubism. She developed an experimental use of language that relied upon the sound and rhythms of words as much as their content. In the 1920s she established a cultural salon in Paris, and influenced such writers as Ernest Hemingway, Sherwood Anderson, and F. Scott Fitzgerald. Some of Stein's writings from these years include Three Lives (1909), The Making of Americans (written between 1906 and 1911; published 1925), and Composition as Explanation (1906), an essay based on lectures she had delivered at Cambridge and Oxford.
Her life and relationships were recounted in the humorous and trenchant work, The Autobiography of Alice B. Toklas (1933), which reflected the life of her longtime companion. In 1934, she traveled to New York, where her opera Four Saints in Three Acts, with music by Virgil Thomson, was a great success performed by an all-black cast. After touring the United States, Stein returned to France, where she and Toklas remained through World War II, living in seclusion in country homes during the German occupation. Stein died on July 27, 1946 in Neuilly-sur-Seine, France. Thomson later wrote music to accompany her work for a posthumously published opera, The Mother of Us All, based on the life of feminist Susan B. Anthony. Stein posed for Jo Davidson in 1920 at his temporary studio in Paris (the sitting is documented in a photograph by Man Ray). Cross-legged and heavy-set, she presented an almost Buddha-like gravity. Davidson, a leading portraitist in twentieth-century America, studied at the Art Students League in New York and the Ecole des Beaux-Arts in Paris. For a period of time he sculpted at the Bryant Park Studios located opposite this park at 80 West 40th Street. He also sculpted a 1957 portrait bust of Fiorello H. LaGuardia located in Little Flower Playground on Manhattan's Lower East Side, and a full-size figure of poet Walt Whitman at Bear Mountain State Park. This casting of the Stein statue is the eighth in an edition of ten – two others exist in the collections of the Metropolitan Museum of Art and the Whitney Museum of American Art. The sculpture was a gift of Dr. Maury Leibowitz (1917–1992), vice-chairman and president of Knoedler-Modarco Galleries. It rests on a granite base designed by Kupiec & Koutsomitis, Architects. The statue was unveiled on November 5, 1992, a few months after the park reopened following an extensive redesign and restoration under the auspices of the Bryant Park Restoration Corporation. Now, to borrow a phrase from Stein's lexicon, there is a "there there," the sculpture occupying a place of prominence in this formerly empty terrace niche between two sycamores (Platanus occidentalis).
Bryant Park
Image by peterjr1961
Gertrude Stein by Jo Davidson
One of five sculptures in the park, this statue honors the trailblazing American author and arts patron Gertrude Stein (1874–1946). Installed in 1992, this casting is based on a model made by Jo Davidson (1883–1952) in Paris in 1923. Its proximity to the New York Public Library reflects Stein's significant literary contributions—from plays, librettos, and film scripts to biographies, autobiographies, lectures, essays, poems, and novels.
Born in Allegheny, Pennsylvania, Stein was the granddaughter of German-Jewish immigrants. Her father Daniel made a fortune in street-railroads and real estate. Stein spent her early childhood in Vienna and Paris before moving with her family to Oakland, California. She studied psychology with the famous psychologist and philosopher William James (1842–1910) at Radcliffe College in Boston and conducted laboratory experiments there with Hugo Munsterberg. Stein nearly completed a medical degree at Johns Hopkins University, but in 1903 she chose to settle in Paris with her brother Leo, where they befriended Pablo Picasso and became champions of avant garde writers, musicians, and artists, including many early Cubist painters.
Stein's early literary endeavors were inspired by the spatial concepts explored in Cubism. She developed an experimental use of language that relied upon the sound and rhythms of words as much as their content. In the 1920s she established a cultural salon in Paris, and influenced such writers as Ernest Hemingway, Sherwood Anderson, and F. Scott Fitzgerald. Some of Stein's writings from these years include Three Lives (1909), The Making of Americans (written between 1906 and 1911; published 1925), and Composition as Explanation (1906), an essay based on lectures she had delivered at Cambridge and Oxford.
Her life and relationships were recounted in the humorous and trenchant work, The Autobiography of Alice B. Toklas (1933), which reflected the life of her longtime companion. In 1934, she traveled to New York, where her opera Four Saints in Three Acts, with music by Virgil Thomson, was a great success performed by an all-black cast. After touring the United States, Stein returned to France, where she and Toklas remained through World War II, living in seclusion in country homes during the German occupation. Stein died on July 27, 1946 in Neuilly-sur-Seine, France. Thomson later wrote music to accompany her work for a posthumously published opera, The Mother of Us All, based on the life of feminist Susan B. Anthony. Stein posed for Jo Davidson in 1920 at his temporary studio in Paris (the sitting is documented in a photograph by Man Ray). Cross-legged and heavy-set, she presented an almost Buddha-like gravity. Davidson, a leading portraitist in twentieth-century America, studied at the Art Students League in New York and the Ecole des Beaux-Arts in Paris. For a period of time he sculpted at the Bryant Park Studios located opposite this park at 80 West 40th Street. He also sculpted a 1957 portrait bust of Fiorello H. LaGuardia located in Little Flower Playground on Manhattan's Lower East Side, and a full-size figure of poet Walt Whitman at Bear Mountain State Park. This casting of the Stein statue is the eighth in an edition of ten – two others exist in the collections of the Metropolitan Museum of Art and the Whitney Museum of American Art. The sculpture was a gift of Dr. Maury Leibowitz (1917–1992), vice-chairman and president of Knoedler-Modarco Galleries. It rests on a granite base designed by Kupiec & Koutsomitis, Architects. The statue was unveiled on November 5, 1992, a few months after the park reopened following an extensive redesign and restoration under the auspices of the Bryant Park Restoration Corporation. Now, to borrow a phrase from Stein's lexicon, there is a "there there," the sculpture occupying a place of prominence in this formerly empty terrace niche between two sycamores (Platanus occidentalis).
Sculptor:
Jo Davidson
Architect:
Kupiec Koutsomitis
Description:
Seated figure on pedestal on base
Materials:
Figure–bronze; pedestal–light gray "Stanstead" Rock of Ages granite (polished); base: charcoal Cold Springs granite (polished)
Dimensions:
Figure H: 2’9" W: 2′ D: 2′; Pedestal H:4’2" W: 2’6" D: 2’6" (includes base); Weight: 225 pounds (figure only)
Cast:
1991
Dedicated:
November 5, 1992
Foundry:
Cavalier-Renaissance Foundry, 250 Smith Street, Bridgeport, CT 06607
Fabricator:
A. Ottavino Corp.
Donor:
Dr. Maury P. Leibovitz
Inscription:
Front of base
GERTRUDE STEIN
1874-1976
BY JO DAVIDSON, 1923
BRONZE CAST 1991 –
Rear of base
GIFT OF
DR. MAURY LEIBOVITZ
TO THE
CITY OF NEW YORK
1992
107336
Image by El Bibliomata
"Oxford, Biblioteca Radcliffe".
Ilustraciones de la obra :
Londres, Edimburgo-Dublín / por P. Villars ; traducción de E. L. de Verneuil ; ilustración de Boudier… [et al.] . – Barcelona : Daniel Cortezo, 1886.
The Daily Mail says Kate Moss is going to make an album. Intrigued or concerned? http://tinyurl.com/29fzumv – by smashboxartists (Smashbox Cosmetics)
RT @Nuy7OweN: The Most Wanted Boys Are –> Justin Bieber, David Archuleta, Logan Lerman, Daniel Radcliffe, Skandar Keynes, Joe Jonas –> @onyitkawanku – by salmaswiftJB (Salma A.R)
[News] Fans Eager For Daniel Radcliffe's Broadway http://z15.invisionfree.com/DanRad_Indo/index.php?showtopic=130 – by DanRad_indo (Dan Radcliffe Indo)
Daniel Radcliffe Trivia!
Dont get me wrong. I love the harry Potter movies, but I really think that Daniel Radcliffe is a terrible actor. What do you think??
Answer by Fancy Effects And That Pazaz
hes okay at sucking dick though.
No comments:
Post a Comment