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Getting The Most From Your Trip To Menorca

Getting The Most From Your Trip To Menorca Menorca (also known as Minorca) – situated east of Mallorca – is one of Spain’s own Balearic Islands in the Mediterranean Sea. With a population of about 82 thousand Spanish-speaking people, you’re sure to find a wide variety of interests to enjoy should you decide to travel here – especially on January 17. January 17 is a nationally celebrated day that marks when Alfonso III of Aragon conquered the island.

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Getting The Most From Your Trip To Menorca

Christie’s

[edit] History In A Peep at Christies’ (1796), James Gillray caricatured actress Elizabeth Farren and huntsman Lord Derby examining paintings appropriate to their tastes and heights.The official company literature states that founder James Christie conducted the first sale in London, England on 5 December 1766, [1] and the earliest auction catalogue the company retains is from December 1766. However, other sources note that James Christie rented auction rooms from 1762, and newspaper advertisements of Christie’s sales dating from 1759 have also been traced.[citation needed] Christie’s soon established a reputation as a leading auction house, and took advantage of London’s new found status as the major centre of the international art trade after the French Revolution. Christie’s was a public company, listed on the London Stock Exchange from 1973 to 1999, after which it was taken into private ownership by Frenchman François Pinault.

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Christie’s

The mystery of the Venetian gentleman, part three

Continued from here and here. When we left off yesterday , National Gallery of Art curator David Alan Brown was expressing skepticism that x-ray evidence and only x-ray evidence could demonstrate that Giorgione (or Titian) painted the NGA’s Portrait of a Venetian Gentleman. Brown pulled two x-rays out of a manila folder, showed them to me and told me that x-ray-pioneering art historian Alan Burroughs had said that the underpaint as revealed on these x-rays identified Giorgione as the author of the painting.

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The mystery of the Venetian gentleman, part three

Two Community Projects: Dred Scott in Philadelphia and Hassan Hajjaj in Cardiff

I ran into Dred Scot t in New York, which is how I learned that he’d done a work for Philadelphia’s  Mural Arts Program .  Dred Scott and Mural Arts?  Scott describes himself as making revolutionary art to propel history forward. 'Danny,' detail from Dred Scott's installation across from Juvenile Court His work has been discussed in books with titles such as Arresting Images: Impolitic Art and Uncivil Actions and Transgressions: The Offences of Art , which says something about its reception. Did Mural Arts really invite him to Philadelphia to create something other than a mural?  Well, you wouldn’t know it from their website, but the piece is well-documented on Scott’s website , with documentation of the process and film interviews with the participants.

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Two Community Projects: Dred Scott in Philadelphia and Hassan Hajjaj in Cardiff

Art in Dublin: two generations challenging national identity and Terry Winters at the Irish Museum of Modern Art

It’s rare, but much more interesting, to find serious museums who are willing to take a focused look at art of particularly local interest rather than seeing yet again the same handful of artists who are fashionable at the moment throughout international art circles.  I saw fascinating exhibits in July at The Dublin City Gallery The Hugh Lane and Project Arts Centre of two generations of artists whose themes are Irish national identity (not individual identity, as was of interest to Americans since the 1980s) during periods of change. Timothy Hawkesworth The Sower at Night 1986 While much of the work would stand up to international viewing it all concerns specifically Irish questions that would require footnotes elsewhere.

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Art in Dublin: two generations challenging national identity and Terry Winters at the Irish Museum of Modern Art

Peter Reyner Banham

Peter Reyner Banham (1922 – 1988) was a prolific architectural critic and writer best known for his 1960 theoretical treatise “Theory and Design in the First Machine Age” and his 1971 book “Los Angeles: The Architecture of Four Ecologies” in which he categorized the Angelean experience into four ecological models (Surfurbia, Foothills, The Plains of Id, and Autopia) and explored the distinct architectural cultures of each ecology. He was based in London, but lived primarily in the United States from the mid 1970s to the end of his life

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Peter Reyner Banham

Help from the Computer Lab

It’s not often that I find myself heading for lectures sponsored by applied mathematicians, but last Spring I went to the Math department at the University of Pennsylvania to hear David Stork talk about the usefulness of computer modeling for art historians. computer study of Velazquez’s Las Meninas And I wasn’t the lone art historian.  I found myself sitting beside David Stone of the University of Delaware and behind us was Chris Poggi, University of Pennsylvania, with a student of hers.  Stork, the chief scientist at Ricoh Innovations and Consulting Professor of Statistics at Stanford University was always interested in art and has studied art history.  He’s also pioneered the field of computer imaging of art , the talk’s subject.  What’s interesting about Stork’s work is that it doesn’t begin with a thesis.  Rather he’s developed a range of tools which he can bring to pre-existing art historical questions: exactly what is happening in Las Meninas ?  How accurately did Vermeer reproduce the scenes and/or figures that he represented?  And most sensationally, is David Hockney correct in his theory that Renaissance painters used optical devices to create such highly realistic looking paintings?

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Help from the Computer Lab

Top Ten Traveling Locations in Southern Africa

Top Ten Traveling Locations in Southern Africa Cruising on a boat at sunset while sipping champagne or driving down a winding road while majestic mountains protect the massive waves caressing the cliffs are all things witnessed and experienced when you arrive in the Southern most point of South Africa. The best places you won’t want to miss are Cape Town, Stellenbosch and Hermanus. by Annette Hendley Cruising on a boat at sunset while sipping champagne or driving down a winding road while majestic mountains protect the massive waves caressing the cliffs are all things witnessed and experienced when you arrive in the Southern most point of South Africa

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Top Ten Traveling Locations in Southern Africa

China – The Middle Kingdom

China – The Middle Kingdom China the most populous country of the world, is officially known as the People’s Republic of China (with the exception of the other state known as the Republic of China which currently governs the island of Taiwan). In economic or business contexts, “the Greater China region” informally means Mainland China, Hong Kong, Macau, and Taiwan. The region has been home to a long-standing civilization comprising successive states and cultures dating back more than 6,000 years

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China – The Middle Kingdom

Going home again: School of Art @ MKG127

Michael Klein breaks the summer-show trap of dusting off whatever's in storage, just to keep the walls covered, with the curious curatorial conceit of going back to his roots for School of Art, which opened on Saturday. Klein, who went to art school in Winnipeg, convenes here a selection of works from his various teachers, some of whom continue to teach at his alma mater, the University of Manitoba's School of Art.

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Going home again: School of Art @ MKG127

Totally cheating

It appears I need to change my gmail signature from “Visit my digital book nook, obsessed over & updated regularly: www.novelwhore.wordpress.com” to read more along the lines of: “Visit my digital book nook, obsessed over regularly, but rarely updated, though every time I write I really enjoy it, so keep on visiting until it  gets more exciting.” And, like the headline suggests, I am going to re-post my article from www.beneaththecover.com right now, since not only does it take  minimal effort since it’s already written, but I’m able to justify to myself that my blog is now updated!  So, for all you readers that I really do appreciate, here’s my latest column: HANDLE WITH CARE What are books, exactly—treasured artifacts to be displayed behind glass, or objects to be enjoyed and devoured, like a good meal?

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Totally cheating

Making Worlds: Transnationalism, Nation States, and Representation at the 53rd La Biennale di Venezia

The title and theme for the 53rd La Biennale di Venezia is Fare Mondi : Making Worlds . Since its inception in 1895, the Biennale has always had an international focus presenting a forum where artists and curators can celebrate their shared and divergent voices and nations can promote their cultural strength. Much like the World Fairs that served as somewhat of an inspiration and model for the original Biennale, the Giardini became focused around 30 national pavilions.

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Making Worlds: Transnationalism, Nation States, and Representation at the 53rd La Biennale di Venezia

Primary Source Cucumber Salad, mid-1800s

Very old books with cracking spines, thoroughly yellowed pages, and portraits of men with handlebar mustaches are, naturally, fascinating reads.  And few more so than The World’s Brightest Gems of Music , an un-copyrighted (at least as far as I could tell) text promoted by editor Professor D. H. Morrison as a volume of: “ songs, hymns, glees, madrigals, ballads, sentences, responses, anthems, chants, etc., etc., all chosen expressly for the eminent fitness to promote The Happiness of Every Home” Thank you Thompson and Thomas of 262 Wabash Avenue, Chicago.

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Primary Source Cucumber Salad, mid-1800s

Andre Cadere & Art Interventions at the 53rd La Biennale Di Venezia

Propped against the wall throughout the Palazzo delle Esposizioni in the Giardini of the 53rd La Biennale di Venezia were Andre Cadere’s Barres de bois rond . These colourful wooden bars seemed purposefully out of place. They had no apparent relationship to the work they were exhibited with, and they were scattered around throughout the exhibition pavillion placed adjacent to other artists’ work, or almost tucked away in forgotten spaces.

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Andre Cadere & Art Interventions at the 53rd La Biennale Di Venezia

A conversation with Naomi Cleary

As I try to write about Naomi Cleary , so that I can introduce you to her, so that you want to read the interview that follows, I am holding one of her pots in my hand. I am holding it in my hand and I am turning it around horizontal and flipping it vertical, I am running my fingers over it’s smooth surface, I am trying to explain to you why I like it so much. The Naomi Cleary I have uses a bunch of yellows and blues and greens, there is some grey, the patterning is definitely floral in nature.

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A conversation with Naomi Cleary

William Blake’s 1809 Exhibition recreated at Tate Britain

In an attempt to define his own reputation William Blake mounted an exhibition of his own work in 1809, above his brother’s shop in Soho.  It was not a success. Installation of William Blake's 1809 Exhibition; Sam Drake/Tate Photography Few people saw the sixteen watercolors and tempera paintings in the exhibition and the single review was scathing.  Robert Hunt, writing in the Sept.  17, 1809 Examiner , wrote: … when the ebullations of a distempered brain are mistaken for the sallies of genius by those whose works have exhibited the soundest thinking in art, the malady [madness] has indeed attained a pernicious height, and it becomes a duty to endeavor to arrest its progress.  Such is the case with the productions and admirers of WILLIAM BLAKE, an unfortunate lunatic, whose personal inoffensiveness secures him from confinement, and consequently, of whom no public notice would have been taken, if he was not … held up to public admiration by many esteemed amateurs and professors as a genius in some respect original and legitimate

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William Blake’s 1809 Exhibition recreated at Tate Britain

Breaking News – Kate Moss’ Robot Replacement, Hugo Boss’ Shocking History and More Skinny Jean Dangers

Filed under: Style in the News CURATING YOUR OWN VINTAGE WARDROBE VIA THE WEB Have you been scouring the web for a vintage Christian Dior 1950′s dress, Emma Watson’s Ossie Clark or even a Civil War era piece?

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Breaking News – Kate Moss’ Robot Replacement, Hugo Boss’ Shocking History and More Skinny Jean Dangers

Gloucester – from Football to Preachers – Gloucester, England, United Kingdom

Jump to the full entry & travel map Gloucester, England, United Kingdom I arrived on the Sunday afternoon, after being subjugated to hours of boring people and their conversations on a National Express Coach when coming into Gloucester . I was dropped off at pretty much the city centre, and given that it was isn’t a particularly big place at all it’s easy just to walk from one side of the town to the other in a matter of minutes

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Gloucester – from Football to Preachers – Gloucester, England, United Kingdom

Overcome Male Infertility 86 -Diagnosis or test From Conventional Perspective | ArticlesBase.com

Diagnosis is a analytics approach, after initial consultation and medical history and personal information have been taken from a patient or couple. The main objective conventional diagnosis is to find the causes of infertility, but unfortunately, it has less than 1% successful rate Read Full Article Here: http://www.articlesbase.com/alternative-medicine-articles/overcome-male-infertility-86-diagnosis-or-test-from-conventional-perspective-1064306.html

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Overcome Male Infertility 86 -Diagnosis or test From Conventional Perspective | ArticlesBase.com

Held captive on a Polish train… – Warsaw, Central Poland, Poland

Jump to the full entry & travel map Warsaw, Central Poland, Poland Having not booked any accommodation for Warsaw, we followed Rob to the Oki Doki Hostel – some 15 minutes walk from Warszawa Centralna. Here we were fortunate to find lodgings and were housed in the gazetka dorm, so named because the entire dormitory was lined with old Polish newspaper cuttings. After a quick change we headed out in search of drink (common theme emerging).

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Held captive on a Polish train… – Warsaw, Central Poland, Poland