Sentences with phrase «by historian james»

The Institute for Legal Research organized a forum on «The Experience of Veterans in American Society» as an informal follow - up to the February 2nd Jefferson Lecture by historian James Wright, president emeritus of Dartmouth College.
Scott's emotions have been recorded by the historian James Grant: «The joy was therefore extreme when, the ponderous lid having been forced open... the regalia were discovered lying at the bottom covered with linen cloths, exactly as they had been left in 1707.»

Not exact matches

Historian James Hitchcock has an insightful column comparing the formal similarities shared by the Episcopal Church in the United States and the New York Times: One is losing members, the other subscribers.
Being Right: Conservative Catholics in America Edited by Mary Jo and R. Scott Appleby Indiana University Press, 416 pages, $ 18.95 Can it be true, as the historian James Hitchcock darkly suggests, that the conservative Catholic William F. Buckley «has sometimes been regarded as a less than....
By good fortune (or divine providence), James» friend happened to be a brilliant thinker and historian.
Hirsch, an authority on writing and a professor of English at the University of Virginia, assumes that responsibility himself, aided by his Virginia colleagues historian Joseph Kett and physicist James Trefil.
When Americans reach for their Bibles, more than half of them pick up a King James Version (KJV), according to a new study advised by respected historian Mark Noll.
Historian James Brundage and legal historian John Witte have described how Catholic canon law of the Middle Ages was used to a significant extent by both the Protestant Reformation and much of secular family law in WesternHistorian James Brundage and legal historian John Witte have described how Catholic canon law of the Middle Ages was used to a significant extent by both the Protestant Reformation and much of secular family law in Westernhistorian John Witte have described how Catholic canon law of the Middle Ages was used to a significant extent by both the Protestant Reformation and much of secular family law in Western society.
This new component of SFWSC, the most respected and influential international spirits competition of its kind, features an all - star panel of judges, led by SFWSC's Director of Judging and leading bar professional, Tony Abou - Ganim, and including the likes of best - selling author and whiskey expert Fred Minnick and Ziggy Eschliman, award - winning radio and television personality and educator, who will blind taste cocktail recipes submitted by some of the industry's most respected leaders including author and beverage consultant Kimberly Haasarud and James Beard - honored cocktail historian, David Wondrich.
(Most historians agree that what happened on the Boyne was engineered for his own devious purposes by Louis XIV of France, and it is certain that James II, asked to face 35,000 troops with 21,000, was not so much routed as obliged to make a quick getaway.)
Cicero wrote of a bronze device made by Archimedes in the third century B.C. And James Evans, a historian of astronomy at the University of Puget Sound in Tacoma, Washington, thinks that the eclipse cycle represented is Babylonian in origin and begins in 205 B.C. Maybe it was Hipparchus, an astronomer in Rhodes around that time, who worked out the math behind the device.
Narrated by Kenneth Branagh, the program runs 55 minutes and features author Ray Bradbury, film critic Stanley Kauffmann, filmmakers Nikola Radosevic, Bernard Vorhaus and Sidney Lumet, artist Al Hirschfeld, historians Brigitte Hamann, Gitta Sereny and Arthur Schlesinger, Jr., screenwriters Walter Bernstein and Budd Schulberg, Hitler's inner circle member Reinhard Spitzy, Charlie Chaplin's son Sydney, Chaplin's friend Ivor Montagu, Chaplin's assistant Dan James, and Chaplin's cousin Betty Tetrick.
Featuring deliciously unsavory dialogue, in an acid, brilliantly structured script by Clifford Odets and Ernest Lehman, and noirish neon cityscapes from Oscar - winning cinematographer James Wong Howe, this cynical masterpiece is accompanied on the Channel by a 1986 documentary about Mackendrick, a 1973 documentary about Howe, and a video interview with film critic and historian Neal Gabler.
Now it has been lovingly remastered from the negatives and Janus films (a partner with Criterion) has applied digital technology to create a new digital restoration for the U.S., which is the source of Criterion's special edition, which features commentary by film scholar James Naremore and new interviews with Keith Baxter, Welles's daughter Beatrice Welles (who has a small role in the film), and Welles historians Simon Callow and Joseph McBride among the supplements.
Those features, all in HD, begin with an audio commentary by Alain Silver and James Ursini, historians who have recorded tracks for nearly twenty noir films of the 1940s and»50s.
Special Features Audio Commentary by Critic / Historian Andrew Sarris, James Ellroy, Russell Crowe, Kevin Spacey, Guy Pearce, James Cromwell, Ruth Myers, David Strathairn, Kim Basinger, Brian Helgeland, Jeannine Oppewall, Dante Spinotti and Danny DeVito Whatever You Desire: Making L.A. Confidential Sunlight and Shadow: The Visual Style of L.A. Confidential A True Ensemble: The Cast of L.A. Confidential L.A. Confidential: From Book to Screen L.A. Confidential TV Series Pilot Off the Record: Vintage Cast / Creator Interviews Director Curtis Hanson's Photo Pitch The L.A. of L.A. Confidential Interactive Map Tour Music - Only Track (5.1) Showcasing Jerry Goldsmith's Score Trailers and T.V. Spots Digital HD
Blu - ray extras include a pair of audio commentaries by film historians David Del Valle, Steven Peros, Paul Scrabo, Lee Pfeiffer and Hank Reineke; an interview with Lee; Lee reading excerpts from Doyle's story; and an isolated track of James Bernard's score.
On the other hand, the treasure hunters are portrayed by an all - star international cast: married art expert James Granger (Matt Damon), the youngest of the lot, architect Richard Campbell (Bill Murray), sculptor Walter Garfield (John Goodman), French art dealer Jean Claude Clermont (Jean Dujardin), art historian Preston Savitz (Bob Balaban) and alcoholic British art expert Donald Jeffries (Hugh Bonneville).
Special Features New Interviews with Critics Molly Haskell and Robert Polito Except from a 1970 Episode of The David Frost Show featuring Actor Joan Crawford «Joan Crawford: The Ultimate Movie Star,» A 2002 Feature - Length Documentary Q&A with Actor Ann Blyth from 2002, Conducted by Film Historian Eddie Muller Segment From a 1969 Episode of the Today Show Featuring Mildred Pierce Novelist James M. Cain Trailer Plus: An Essay by Entire Imogen Sara Smith
Interview with Hampton Sides about Hellhound on His Trail Memphis historian and subculture explorer Hampton Sides was six years old on April 4, 1968, when Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. was gunned down on the balcony of the Lorraine Motel by a prison escapee named James Earl Ray.
Breeder's Education — Karen Thayne Budget Committee — Mary Ellen LaRochelle and Dick Heliker By ‐ Law Revision — Electronic Communication — Chelsea James Ethics Committee — Dick Heliker Futurity — Debbie Fuxa Health — Layle Griffioen Echols Historian — Gary Shiozaki Hound Events — Terri Jones IGCA Approved Mentor Program — Cecilia Resnick Judge's Education — Cecilia Resnick Legislation — Jan Elliot - Goin Public Education — Carol Smith Rescue Liason — Mary Ellen LaRochelle Specialty Guidelines — Marsha Pugh, Jessica Hekl Sunshine Committee — June Mastracola Versatility — Terri Jones Webmaster — Gary Shiozaki
Greco Deco is a term coined by Washington, DC based art historian James M. Goode to describe a style of art and architecture popularized in the late 1920s and 1930s.
It is accompanied by a fully illustrated catalogue with an essay by James Lawrence, a critic and historian specializing in postwar and contemporary art.
Written by legendary performance art historian RoseLee Goldberg, Performa 11 is the definitive document of the Performa 11 biennial, and features documentation by the 150 artists who took part, including Robert Ashley, Tarek Atoui, Gerard Byrne, Simon Fujiwara, Guy Maddin, Liz Magic Laser, Athi - Patra Ruga, Laurel Nakadate and James Franco, Shirin Neshat and Frances Stark.
Count among these offerings Joseph Grigley's «The Gregory Battcock Archive» (2009 - 14) a selection of personal ephemera from the late art historian and critic; Julie Ault's selection of works by the late - artist Martin Wong and her screening of filmmaker James Benning's Easy Rider (1969); and the late Tony Greene's paintings curated by Catherine Opie and Richard Hawkins.
Manchanda's engaging volume examines key works from the past fifty years and includes short texts by artists, curators, and art historians, including Josephine Meckseper, James Voorhies, Richard Meyer, and Hal Foster.
Her first retrospective exhibit was in 1966 at the Gallery of Art at Howard University, curated by art historian James A. Porter.
At BAFTA Qualifying Aesthetica Short Film Festival: ASFF, we welcome Turner Prize nominee Isaac Julien for a special Q&A hosted by Art Historian Dr James Boaden on Friday 7 November.
One had to feel a little sorry for him in the reckoning: One of his paintings, through no doings of his own, breaks auction records for a work by a living European artist, and he gets pitted against no less a luminary than Giovanni Battista Tiepolo as quintessential of what art historian James Meyer called the market's «overestimation of the contemporary.»
Curated by renowned art historian John Wilmerding, the Pop art survey will include over 75 important works by Robert Arneson, Vija Celmins, Jim Dine, Robert Indiana, Jasper Johns, Alex Katz, Edward Kienholz, Jeff Koons, Roy Lichtenstein, Marisol, Claes Oldenburg, Ed Ruscha, Robert Rauschenberg, Larry Rivers, James Rosenquist, George Segal, Marjorie Strider, Wayne Thiebaud, Andy Warhol, John Wesley, Tom Wesselmann, and H.C. Westermann.
James Cuno, president of the J. Paul Getty Trust and an evangelist for the use of technology by art historians, assessed «Recognition» as a «well - meaning and an interesting experiment.
Her first retrospective exhibit was in 1966 at the gallery of Art at Howard University, curated by art historian James A. Porter.
The gallery's inaugural exhibitions featured artists such as Cindy Sherman, Robert Longo, Troy Brauntuch, Jack Goldstein, Louise Lawler, Sherrie Levine, James Welling, Richard Prince, and Walter Robinson — artists who would later be identified by critics and historians as Pictures artists.
Publications include Nihilistic Optimistic, published by Blain Southern London on the occasion of the inaugural exhibition at Hanover Square of the same title October 2012 with an interview by Hans Ulrich Obrist, an essay by Jon Savage and foreword by Gustav Metzger; Turning the Seventh Corner, published by Blain Southern, London, 2011, with texts by David Adjaye and James Putnam which comprehensively documents the conception and realisation of the artists» exhibition at Blain Southern, Berlin, 2011; British Rubbish, an updated survey of the artists» work from 1996 to 2010 with an essay by Jeffrey Deitch, and new texts by Michael Bracewell and Nick Cave, published October 2011 by Rizzoli, New York; Polymorphous Perverse, a documentation of works exhibited at the Freud Museum, London, providing a fascinating insight into Freud's theories and how they relate to art practice with critical essays from the distinguished American art historian Linda Nochlin and James Putnam, published by Other Criteria, London, 2008; and Wasted Youth, a survey of the artists» work from 1996 to 2006 with essays by Jeffrey Deitch and Sir Norman Rosenthal, published by Rizzoli, New York in 2006.
Inspired by midcentury photobooks and magazines, as well as the materials in the artist's own archive, 50 Photographs features a tipped - in sleeve with fictitious contact sheets, a checklist and an essay by art historian and curator James Oles on photographic prints and archives, in which he recounts the story behind this publication.
A catalogue, with essays by Jon Thompson, Angel Gonzales, critic, James Elkins, art historian, and Roger Cardinal, author and authority on Outsider Art, accompanies the exhibition.
On the occasion of the exhibition, the gallery will publish a catalogue in collaboration with Steidl, Göttingen, which will feature new scholarship on the artist by art historian James Lawrence.
In addition to contributions by the directors of the Museum Ludwig and ARoS — Yilmaz Dziewior and Erlend G. Høyersten — the authors include Tom Holert, distinguished German art historian, taking an in - depth look at Rosenquist's unique spatiality; Stephan Diederich, curator and specialist at Museum Ludwig, giving a review of the themes in the exhibition; Sarah Bancroft, art historian, curator, and Rosenquist expert who co-curated the 2003 Guggenheim Museum Rosenquist retrospective (and current head of the Rosenquist Foundation and the studio) illuminates Rosenquist's seminal source collages; Tino Grass, German designer and researcher, revealing new perspectives on Rosenquist's historic work F - 111; Isabel Gebhardt, Museum Ludwig conservator, outlining the intensive research efforts and conservation work recently undertaken on Horse Blinders; and Tim Griffin, former editor - in - chief of the esteemed American art journal Artforum, discussing the political potential of Pop art as exemplified by a work James Rosenquist created for one of the magazine's issues.
Facing Two Directions: A Japanese Painter Looks to China: A small exhibition built around a pair of six-fold screens by Sakaki Hyakusen, gifts of distinguished UC Berkeley art historian emeritus James Cahill.
The James Cohan Gallery is publishing a full - color catalogue «Constellations» to accompany the exhibition, with essays by art historians Karen Lang and Pepe Karmel.
It includes a joint introduction by Enrique Juncosa, José Conrado de Villalonga and Iwona Blazwick, directors of the organising institutions, as well as essays by Professor Roger Cardinal, art historians James Elkins and Ángel González Garcia and Jon Thompson (price $ 29.95).
In this thought - provoking conversation, hosted by the Leadership Advisory Committee, contemporary artist Kerry James Marshall and art historian Kymberly Pinder discussed how artists have shaped the public reception of African American art history through their writings and other activist gestures.
Pousette - Dart's work has been discussed and reappraised by art historians and artists, among them Alex Bacon, Britta Buhlmann, Charles H. Duncan, Robert Hobbs, Sam Hunter, Hilton Kramer, Donald Kuspit, James K. Monte, Stephen Polcari, Joanna Pousette - Dart, Carter Ratcliff, Barbara Rose, Lowery Stokes Sims, Roberta Smith, Robert Storr and Christopher Wool.
The gallery has published more than one hundred twenty - five exhibition catalogs with scholarly contributions by leading art historians, artists or critics; authors have included Hilton Als, David Anfam, Debra Bricker Balken, Isabelle Dervaux, Joseph Jacobs, Leslie King - Hammond, Sam Hunter, Susan C. Larsen, Gail Levin, George Lipsitz, Whitfield Lovell, Robert Morgan, Francis V. O'Connor, Carter Ratcliff, Arlene Raven, Martica Sawin, Barry Schwabsky, James Siena, Lowery Stokes Sims, Elisabeth Sussman, Stephen Westfall, and John Yau.
Andrew Lloyd Webber, who owns several works by Spencer and considers both Stanley Spencer and Francis Bacon as two of the greatest British painters of the twentieth century as well as British sculptor Anthony Gormley, broadcaster Jon Snow and art historian James Fox, who recently became President of the Friends of Stanley Spencer Gallery.
The critic, James Pinero, who is also the magazine's managing editor, cited an essay in the exhibition invitation by art historian Karen Wilkin that praised the paintings» «ravishing physicality» and said Little's orchestrations of geometry and chroma «delight our eyes and stir our emotions and intellect.»
Such an observation was elaborated on nearly ten years later by the art historian James Meyer in his nuanced 1993 exhibition What Happened to the Institutional Critique?.
Within hours of arriving in Seoul I delivered to a representative of President Moon an open letter signed by climate scientist James Hansen, Whole Earth Catalog founder Stewart Brand, Pulitzer Prize - winning historian Richard Rhodes, and dozens of other climate and environmental experts, warning of the impacts of a nuclear phase - out.
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