11 research outputs found
Exile Vol. III No. 2
Trade Winds by Lois Rowley 7-20
Little Movements and Little Noises by Dennis Trudell 21-25
The Second Angel by Lewis D. Clark 27-43
Journeying Through the Bankbrooks by Virginia Wallace 46-49
Say It With Flowers by Robert Marriott 50-51
Departure by Yoko Kuyama 52-58
POETRY
Sun-Discovered by Barbara Haupt 20
The Optimist by Jesse Matlack 25
Fragments of Finality by Ellen Moore 26
Along A Stream by Yoko Kuyama 43
Elegy by Nikos Stangos 44-45
You Sauntered Out To Love by Ellen Moore 45
A Poem by Thomas Turnbull 49
Song No. 7 by Nikos Stangos 59
In this issue the editors of EXILE are proud to publish Departure by Yoko Kuyama. This story has been awarded the semi-annual Denison Book Store - EXILE Creative Writing Prize
Exile Vol. IV No. 1
The August Rose by Virginia Wallace 8-12
Beyond the Bauxite Mines by Barbara Ann Jucius 15-19
The Harvest by Anne Irgens 20-21
Recurrence: A Prose Poem by Nikos Stangos 22-27
The Day of the Painters by Edmund Boynton 28-35
Sophomore Slump by Jerilyn Robey 37-43
POETRY
These Woods by Barbara Haupt 12
The Accused by Ellen Moore 13
Aberration by Barbara Haupt 19
Hate Eats by Karen Howey 21
Evanescence by Sandra Miskelly 36
Thoughts of You by William K. Lewis 36
Three Songs by Nikos Stangos 44
In this issue the editors of EXILE are proud to publish The Accused by Ellen Moore. This poem has been awarded the semi-annual Denison Book Store - EXILE Creative Writing Prize
Concepts of Modern Art : From Fauvism to Postmodernism
In a series of essays by some of the most internationally acclaimed writers on art, the extraordinary artistic challenges of the twentieth century are introduced and discussed with unparalleled lucidity, intelligence and factual accuracy. No other book on modern and contemporary art presents in as concise and authoritative a manner the ideas that underlie the diverse and radical developments of the last hundred years.
The main concepts and development of art from about 1900 to the present are analyzed in authoritative essays by some of the most distinguished art historians and critics in Britain and the United States. With Edward Lucie-Smith on Pop Art, Suzi Gablik on Minimal Art, Norbert Lynton on Expressionism, and Sarah Whitfield on Fauvism, to name a few, these scholarly essays illuminate each particular artistic movement of the century, and together form an entire history of modern art