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Cézanne Reconsidered - The Magazine Antiques

Cézanne Reconsidered Fig. 1. Nature morte de pêches et poires (Still life with Peaches and Pears) by Paul Cezanne (1839–1906), c. 1885–1887. Oil on canvas, 14 ⅝ by 17 ¾ inches. Private collection; photograph courtesy of Bridgeman Images and the Museum of Fine Arts, Boston. “Others abide our question,” Matthew Arnold said of Shakespeare, “thou art free!” 1 Arnold meant that the Bard, in his sublime universality, soared above those petty reckonings that critics apply to all other cultural figures. Which makes one wonder whether Paul Cézanne abides our question. One suspects that he would if we ever asked it. But we do not. For we haven’t really thought much about Cézanne in over a hundred years. Perhaps we have not even looked at him very much. In place of such probing inspection stands the calcified residue of what once was a living aesthetic response. Even worse, that response is apt to be borrowed from others long dead, men like Clive Bell who, in 1913, c

Premier Hospitality International 2 8 - Premier Construction News

Premier Hospitality International 2.8 Welcome to the latest edition of Premier Hospitality International. In this month’s issue we take a look at The Nancy and Rich Kinder Building; we check out Grand Park Hotel Rovinj; and we explore Chateau De Vignee. The Museum of Fine Arts, Houston (MFAH), celebrated 2020 with a bang following the opening of The Nancy and Rich Kinder Building. Designed by Steven Holl Architects especially for the display of the important and rapidly growing MFAH collections of 20th and 21st-century art, to which it dedicates more than 100,000 square feet of gallery space, the Kinder Building is the final component in the Museum’s eight-year project to expand and enhance its Susan and Fayez S. Sarofim Campus in the heart of Houston.

Un aperçu de la vie d après : ce que prévoit le Musée des maisons comtoises pour sa réouverture ! • macommune info

Un aperçu de la vie d après : ce que prévoit le Musée des maisons comtoises pour sa réouverture ! • macommune info
macommune.info - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from macommune.info Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.

Mound to Mountain: The Evolutionary Path to Building the Great Pyramid

Pyramids were built for over a millennium in ancient Egypt. During that time, we can discern a definite trend in their development, experimentation, ambition, and the peak precision in building the Great Pyramid of Khufu, followed by a long period of architectural decline. So far, we have traced the earliest mounds at Abydos over 7,000 years ago to the burial and funerary mounds of Pharaoh Khasekhemwy circa 2680 BC. These were symbols of resurrection and royal divinity, ripe with magical potential. They were still, however, relatively unimposing. When did the Egyptian mounds first become mountains? The biggest leap forward on the road to building the Great Pyramid occurred under the 3rd Dynasty Pharaoh Djoser and his famous architect: Imhotep.

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