Sentences with phrase «associated with the poets»

The author of over 30 books of poetry and prose, Kyger was associated with the poets of the San Francisco Renaissance, the Beat Generation, Black Mountain, and the New York School.
As the editor of an important mimeograph magazine, Juillard, in the late 1960s, he became associated with poets and writers such as John Ashbery, James Schuyler, Harry Matthews, Ron Padgett, Larry Fagin, Charles North, Kenward Elmslie, and others connected to the New York School.

Not exact matches

(Poets & Quants)-- Traditionally, we associate spring with fresh starts.
Today, one can earn an advanced degree in literature without having to associate with actual novelists or poets, or a degree in art history without bothering to meet practicing artists.
About this Mingana writes, «It is the constant tradition in the Eastern church that the Apostle Thomas evangelized India, and there is no historian, no poet, no breviary, no liturgy, and no writer of any kind who, having the opportunity of speaking of Thomas, does not associate his name with India.
The book is interesting as a scripture of a particular religion, in that it includes so much material from poets who were never associated with the movement, though some of them deeply influenced Nanak.
This is the period in which the Olympian gods and such myths as those associated with the Trojan War were taken seriously, provided the major material for sculptors and poets, and profoundly influenced the vision of reality.
Poets celebrated the divinity associated with Augustus, and across the empire coins, monuments, temples and artwork promoted the cult of Augustus and other emperors who adopted Caesar as an honorific title.
In the religious rite and in the hopes and convictions associated with it, the seer - poet of the Exile saw parallels to the plight of his people.
It is named for Kelsey and Kayte Grammer's son and is associated with the English poet W.H. Auden, who has been admired for his ability to write poems in nearly every imaginable verse form and mimic other writers.
Disturbingly, Bertolucci, a poet raised on the cinema in Langlois's Cinematheque, a «true artist» now refusing interviews to anyone not associated with a «major daily,» has crafted a film that talks about growing out of movie love as something inevitable and to be accepted with resignation.
Melissa Faliveno, associate editor of Poets & Writers Magazine, talks with the editors of five independent presses about the kind of work they look to publish, the relationships they cultivate with their authors, and the balance between publishing traditional work and developing new and innovative ideas for both print and digital literature.
Sonia and Robert Delaunay's work is associated with Orphism, a movement they developed together, but the term itself was coined by the great French poet and surrealist Guillaume Apollinaire.
This exhibition is curated by P.S. 1 Associate Curator Larissa Harris and is accompanied by a publication containing information sections on the artists; an essay by Harris; an essay by independent curator and critic Bennett Simpson; puzzles by poet and translator Monica de la Torre; and interviews with the artists by Harris.
The exhibit features lesser - known work by Meatyard — not just his macabre, blurred images of children in lonely landscapes — and a host of his lesser - known contemporaries such as Guy Mendes, Charles Traub, Cranston Ritchie, Robert C. May and poets Ronald Johnson and Jonathan Williams (who are associated with Black Mountain College).
In addition to pushing back against the flatness that Clement Greenberg insisted was absolutely integral to painting, Plimack Mangold also distinguished herself from the painterly realists, such as Fairfield Porter and Alex Katz, whose work the poet - critics associated with the New York School championed.
They have been cast, like Burton and Taylor, in a variety of showy roles: as painters interested in reviving aspects of the art form in its most staid and classical modes; as Marxist or Marcuseian critics of commodity culture and its discontents; as leering champions of youth movements and counter-culture stylings; as strict, detached, ironic appropriationists; and, finally, as sincere and romantic poets attendant on the tragedy of age's advancing degenerations of the body and of the melancholy states of nostalgia associated primarily with the waning of youthful beauty.
Grove published most of the American Beats of the 1950s (Jack Kerouac, William Burroughs, and Allen Ginsberg) as well as poets like Frank O'Hara of the New York School and poets associated with Black Mountain and the San Francisco Renaissance such as Robert Duncan.
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