Sentences with phrase «german poet»

On several occasions during the interview Glaenzer quotes a passage from the poem «Steps» by the German poet Hermann Hesse, which he's handwritten across several sheets of plain white paper, revealing each line one page at a time.
Durand's choice of exhibits is based on a phrase from a poem by the German poet Friedrich Hölderlin (1770 - 1843), «Wenn in die Ferne geht der Menschen wonend Leben».
derives from a 1788 poem by the German poet Friedrich Schiller.
The title was inspired by the German poet Stefan George.
This new work, dated 2013, is called Transfigured Night and takes its title from a poem by the early 20th Century German poet Richard Dehmel.
Featuring work by Polly Apfelbaum, Beverly Fishman, Ryan Mrozowski and Kathleen Ryan, the multimedia show is based on German poet and philosopher Friedrich Schiller's concept of «Spieltrieb,» which can be translated as «the urge to play» or «play impulse,» and was for Schiller the living shape that was synonymous with beauty.
The groups, formed before 1924, were led by the German poet Yvan Goll and Breton.
derives from a 1788 poem by the German poet Friedrich Schiller, later set to music by Austrian composer Franz Schubert in 1819.
This year's theme is based on a poem by the German poet Friedrich Schiller which asks: «Beautiful world, where are you?»
Austrian auteur Jessica Hausner's 2009 drama Lourdes was a fantastic film, and Amour Fou is a glum but beautifully made period drama based on the life of German poet Heinrich von Kleist.
Five years after Lourdes, Hausner returns with a film inspired by the life and death of German poet Heinrich von Kleist.
Richard Reitinger, who had also contributed to Wings of Desire, shared writing credits with Wenders and the East German poet / playwright / actor Ulrich Zieger.
Hopefully, during the talk it will become clear why I'd like to start the webinar with a citation from the Erlkönig, a poem by the German poet Goethe: «If you are not willing, I'll use force».
An oft - repeated anecdote concerns the sermon they heard that first Sunday and minister Jack Jensen's mention of the German poet Rainer Maria Rilke.
Which reminded me of a poem by Bertolt Brecht, the German poet and playwright who cast his lot with communist East Germany after World War II.
«God is the no longer sayable,» said the German poet Rilke, «and his attributes fly back into creation.»
The German poet Heinrich Heine stood with a friend before the cathedral of Amiens in France.
In 1823 Heinrich Heine, the German poet and journalist, wrote, «This was a prelude only, where books are being burnt, people will be burnt eventually.»
Only a punk philosophy major with limited experience would ever quote a German poet to people struggling with the fact that their financial life was in ruins.
German poets, composers and painters have long explored the forest as a place of longing, authenticity and dependability.

Not exact matches

The poet seriously wanted to make the French believe that the Germans had for the moment confined their democratic revolution to the lofty sphere of philosophy but would make up for it thoroughly in the arena of politics.
If I understand him aright, it is one of Karl Barth's profoundest insights that there is: I say «insights» and I pause, recalling how Dr. Olive Wyon (a most experienced translator of German theology) remarked to me once in conversation that where Barth is concerned, for all the massiveness and intellectual power of his argument, one is in the end dealing with a poet rather than an exegete.
Two rabbis in particular provided special guidance for me: Nachmanides (Rabbi Moshe ben Nachman), a thirteenth - century Spanish scholar, philosopher, physician, and poet, a renaissance man who brought a kabbalistic or mystical orientation to the text, and Samson Raphael Hirsch, a nineteenth - century German Orthodox rabbi who expressed an uncanny ecological perspective.
He published several of his poems, and translations of German Expressionist poets, in Spanish literary journals.
In Wales, Rowan Williams is a poet as well as a theologian who often engages with literature, Donald Allchin is in deep dialogue with poets in many traditions, and Oliver Davies, having ranged through German, Russian and Welsh literature as well as Meister Eckhart, is now engaged on a major work of fundamental and systematic theology with a strong literary dimension.
On the other hand, the series of Italian renaissances was furthered by the French and German classicist movement, and by the nostalgic passion for Greece among the German and English romantic poets, not to speak of the more recent attempts by Nietzsche, and into our time, Heidegger, Leo Strauss, and others.
Once started there was no stopping him, and Luther found yet another identity as poet and composer, and the principal originator of a whole new tradition of German church liturgy, rooted in the existing musical culture, and destined to reach its marvellous climax at Leipzig in the work of Johann Sebastian Bach.
The Germans themselves, my kinsmen, as has been mentioned before, brought this all to full fruition by seeing themselves as a superior culture with the best poets and philosophers.
Fiennes had a splashy introduction to the screen: He was Heathcliff to Juliette Binoche's Cathy in a TV version of Wuthering Heights; he was the German officer in Schindler's List, fully committed to the pathology and vanity of the man; he was a bright young hope with a serious deficiency of character in Robert Redford's Quiz Show; and he was Almasy, a desert poet, a reckless lover, and on his death - bed much of the time in The English Patient.
Director Volker Schlöndorff had already made three feature films (including his influential 1966 debut, Young Törless) by the time he tackled this project, casting a twenty - four - year - old Rainer Werner Fassbinder in the role of a booze - soaked, womanizing poet who goes on a scorched - earth bender across the German countryside.
The famous poet Celan inspired Kiefer's themes of German history and the Holocaust, together with the spiritual concepts of Jewish Kabbala.
Literary Slovenia As part of Slovenia's appearance as Guest of Honour at the Frankfurter Buchmesse 2022, the German public will be introduced to famous authors such as Boris Pahor, Drago Jančar and Slavoj Žižek, poets like Srečko Kosovel, Dane Zajc and Tomaž Šalamun as well as up - and - coming literary talent.
Fairy tales for adult readers remained popular throughout Europe well into the 19th century — particularly in Germany, where the Brothers Grimm published their massive collection of German fairy tales (revised and edited to reflect the Brothers» patriotic and patriarchal ideals), providing inpiration for novelists, poets, and playrights among the German Romantics.
Interest in Dada followed in the wake of documentary publications, such as Robert Motherwell's The Dada Painters and Poets (1951)[3] and German language publications from 1957 and later, to which some former Dadaists contributed.
Enter the world of London - based artist #MarcCamilleChaimowicz, on view now at... twitter.com/i/web/status/9… Tomorrow at 6:30 pm, join poet @DorotheaLasky for a reading from her new book «Milk,» presented in conjunction with... twitter.com/i/web/status/9… German - Argentinian photographer #GreteStern was born on this day in 1904.
«Das edbeden in Chile» quotes a German Romantic poet, Heinrich von Kleist, while a series from the late 1980s compares its aluminum surfaces to Moby Dick.
He was a German - French, or Alsatian, sculptor, painter, poet and abstract artist in other media such as torn and pasted paper.
Antiques and The Arts Weekly, Nov. 18, Historic John Trumbull Paintings Go Up At Wadsworth Atheneum Hartford Business Journal, Nov. 7, Loughman aims to reconnect Wadsworth to community by John Stearns New York Times Style Magazine, Oct. 20, The Renaissance Artifact Collections That Are Back in Style by Gisela Williams Boston Globe, Oct. 17, Face to face with «The Old Man and Death» by Sebastian Smee Hartford Courant, Oct. 13, Sky Dives, Space Travel Subject of Dulce Chacón's «Fallen Angels» At Wadsworth by Susan Dunne Hartford Courant, Oct. 13 Artists Define Their Femininity In Bruce, Wadsworth Exhibits by Susan Dunne CTNow, Oct. 2, Wadsworth Splendor IX Gala by Alex Syphers Hartford Courant, Sep. 19, Photography Exhibits At Atheneum, Real Art Ways, Lyman Allyn by Susan Sunne Hartford Courant, Aug. 21, Wadsworth Atheneum Begins Free Admission For Hartford Residents by Susan Dunne Hartford Courant, June 14, Wadsworth Atheneum Exhibit Confronts Violence Against African - Americans by Susan Dunne WPKN, May 28, Live Culture with Martha Willette Lewis Episode 15 featuring Vanessa German The New York Times, April 15, Gothic to Goth: Exploring the Impact of the Romantic Era in Fashion by Susan Hodara The Wall Street Journal, April 5, «Gothic to Goth: Romantic Era Fashion & Its Legacy» Review by Laura Jacobs Hartford Courant, March 24, Wadsworth's «Gothic to Goth» Celebrates Romantic - Era Fashion by Susan Dunne The New York Times, March 10, Poets Give Voice to Art in «Sound & Sense» at Wadsworth Museum by Susan Hodara Vogue, March 4, A New Exhibition Shows How Fall's Goth-Fest Has Roots in 19th - Century Romanticism, by Laird Borrelli - Persson The New York Times, Jan. 24, Evening Hours Celebrating the Winter Antiques Show by Bill Cunningham The New York Times, Jan. 22, Winter Antiques Show Offers a Collection of Recent and Rare Works by Roberta Smith New York Social Diary, Jan. 22, Part of the Art The Boston Globe, Jan. 21, Porcelain mastery is in delicate details by Sebastian Smee InCollect, Jan. 15, The Winter Antiques Show Loan Exhibition: Legacy for the Future: The Wadsworth Atheneum Museum of Art by Robin Jaffee Frank The Magazine Antiques, Winter 2016, Sound and vision: Poetry and American art by Alyce Perry Englund The Magazine Antiques, Winter 2016, Meeting Ground by Patricia Hickson The Magazine Antiques, Winter 2016, OMG indeed!
The Lebanese poet and painter Etel Adnan occupies a special place in the 13th edition of Documenta, the international exhibition of contemporary art that opens every five years and lasts for a hundred days in the central German city of Kassel.
The text of the painting is an English translation of the lyrics to Mahler's Das Lied von der Erde (The Song of the Earth), which are a selection of poet Hans Bethge's German renderings of ancient Chinese poetry.
As the first extensive introduction of Sean's art and life to the Chinese audiences, it collects some important reviews including Architectural principles in the art of Sean Scully by Arthur C. Danto, A Modernism that turned into a tradition by the renowned German philosopher and socialist Jürgen Habermas, and «Painting is permanently primitive...» by the poet and critic John Yau.
Through meeting and encouragement of American poet Ezra Pound and German sculptor Heinz Henghes, she began painting again and this time in abstraction.
The avant - garde German painter, sculptor, graphic artist and poet Max Ernst, was - with his lifelong friend Jean Arp (1886 - 1966)- the co-founder of the Cologne branch of Dada, and later became an important member of the Surrealism movement.
Her interest in new art was instrumental in advancing the careers of several important modern artists including the American painters Jackson Pollock and William Congdon, the Austrian surrealist Wolfgang Paalen, the sound poet Ada Verdun Howell and the German painter Max Ernst, whom she married in December 1941.
Jean Arp or Hans Arp (16 September 1886 — 7 June 1966) was a German - French sculptor, painter, poet, and abstract artist in other media such as torn and pasted paper.
MEDIA A Feb. 27 Google Doodle aimed at the platform's users in Germany pays tribute to May Ayim, the author, poet, and activist who is of Ghanaian - German ancestry.
If there was any single inspirer of Josef Albers's embrace of color it was the German Romantic poet, Johann Wolfgang Goethe.
Many artists she went on to champion — the German painter Gerhard Richter; the British filmmaker Steve McQueen; the French conceptualist Pierre Huyghe; the Belgian poet - provocateur Marcel Broodthaers — have become critical stars.
a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z