Government and Design

1920s France 

  1.  Social change-

The typified woman of the 1920s, the flapper, was, as Ginsburg describes, the “young, more aggressive and less conventional woman The flappers wore shocking knee-length dresses and were known for their bobbed hair and scandalous dances. Zelda Fitzgerald, a flapper herself, described the flapper as a woman who thought “it was fun to flirt, …bobbed her hair, …put on her choicest pair of earrings, and a great deal of audacity and rouge and went into battle” Flappers did epitomize the Lost Generation and the excess associated with Paris in the 1920s. Flappers in Paris also set a trend that would be followed in other countries, such as the United States.

  1.  Spatial environments
  2.  Propaganda-In the opening of the year 1920, France was in a stronger position than she had been in for several generations. The Allied victory over Germany and the restoration.
  3.  Residential life
  4.  Health
  5.  Technology
  6.  Transportation
  7.  Markets
  8.  Fashion
  9.  War

11. Film

 

17 decades of consumer design Textile Designs ( Africa) 1850-2010

 

 

 

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Asante Ashanti People)

Asante Kente Cloth Traditional ( Asante Ashanti People)

 

 

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1.) 2.)http://shopcurious.blogspot.com/2009/07/zandra-rhodes-and-art-of-colour.html last accesed

2.)
http://dresstoimpress23.blogspot.com/2013/04/african-textiles-combined.html

3.) https://www.etsy.com/listing/160387811/royal-blue-pink-african-fabric-6-yards?ref=shop_home_active_22

4.)https://www.etsy.com/listing/166573974/super-wax-prints-materials-100-cotton?ref=shop_home_active_21

5.)http://risingshoots.com/threadbare-ghanas-textile-industry/

6.https://www.etsy.com/listing/187018379/beige-african-fabrics-stores-online?ref=shop_home_active_18

7.)http://www.pinterest.com/pin/34902965835878312/

8.)http://www.fibre2fashion.com/news/textile-news/newsdetails.aspx?news_id=12117

9.)http://www.adventureimports.com/images/batik1.JPG

10.)http://www.yorkeantiquetextiles.com/items/1950-3.jpg

 

PostModernism Style…

 

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Designer: Oliver P.

Date Manufactured: March 18 1970

Material Characteristics: Digital ink and Typography

What influenced the production of the design: What Influenced the  production of my design was the opening of the Shad Thames Museum In London.

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Designer: Primero DeMayo

Date Manufactured: April 29 1969

Material Characteristics: Digital ink and Typography On Cream Paper

What influenced the production of the design: What Influenced the  production of my design was a celebration of workers day.

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Designer: Anonymous

Date Manufactured: March 18 1970

Material Characteristics: Ink and Watercolor

What influenced the production of the design: The Evening concert of the Moulin Rouge.

 

 

 

 

Designer: Oliver P.

 

Date Manufactured: 1970

 

Material Characteristics: Ink and Illustrator

What influenced the production of the design: The Legacy of Bob Dylan.

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Designer: US. Army

Date Manufactured:  1970

Material Characteristics: Digital ink and Typography With Blue, Red and White.

What influenced the production of the design: What Influenced the  production of my design was getting into the United States Army.

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1.)http://www.behance.net/gallery/Postmodernism-Posters/1444021

Designer: Oliver P.

Date Manufactured: March 18 1970

Material Characteristics: Digital ink and Typography

What influenced the production of the design: What Influenced the  production of my design was the opening of the Shad Thames Museum In London.

 

 

 

Post Modernism Is? Tis the Question

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 This is an example of postmodernism styling, because of the live, jazzy colors. This piece defiantly reminds me an art deco piece. TheTypography of this spread dances at your eyes from the title Let’s Dance, and Art in the stylistic style of her fingers towards the right side of the work. This magazine spread was well constructed in a postmodernism style. I love the way the model is structured to give a cool pop look! Its very intriguing to color pallets as well the whole canvas of the cover. The spreads line choice makes a mind glance at the magazine and think fun postmodernism styling fashion, or architecture is going to be featured inside the magazine.
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 This painting reminds me of postmodernism because of the egg shape structure. Also the spread-out pieces of the eggs.   It’s  decorated with a shape of a green triangle and oval shapes but staged on lines to represent a family of contrasting shape colors. The dimensions of this work were very spread out as well and suggest the reader of this artwork to look from top to bottom.
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I love this picture because of the mickey mouse of the ear is  very postmodernism expression and the twightlight of the eye dealing with the shape of the eye and lashes. The blue of the ears stands out to me, because it looks like it was a mixture of yellow in the artwork.The contrast of the colors between blue and orange works well and is post prevalent in this portrait. The shape of the eyelids and functions of the ovals. The mouth piece is most prevalent in this work of art with colors of red, white,purple and beige. This is a very fun piece.
Origin:

1.)tp://www.vam.ac.uk/__data/assets/image/0005/181895/NAL.PP.22.J_ID_art_issue_1000px.jpg lastaccessed April 8, 2014

2.)http://m13.mask9.com/sites/default/files/styles/l/public/imagepad/20130426/20130426142733-907d7c4a69c6dd7af4af81e17542c612eb54336b.38/work-xiawu-by-tse-ching-mask9.jpg last accessed April 8, 2014

3.)http://www.bing.com/images/search?q=Postmodernism+Art+Movement&Form=IQFRDR#view=detail&id=BAFBA1FCFFA4FE659DA401BEBE2097AE39F94E30&selectedIndex=32 last accessed April 8, 2014


The Process of Design in a Design Thinking Community

  An example from the D talks discussion I experienced was  The importance of Design in a community of design thinking process. Its very important because they help the way you build your reputation in a community as equipped you to join new groups as that support helping out the community also advancing new technology. It also promotes a place where you can freely talk about  Claude Garmound opening his first type foundry  selling and  developing fonts. They also can discuss how in 1816 the first sans-serif fonts makes a entrance in a book. A designer is  able to have tea parties also wine parties and talk about this importance in the community that is valid , upon making it brighter in the design world.

Lindsay Brugger’s speech stood out to me she talked about economic political and architecture for humanity work and how there were programs to help shelter men and women,  and grow  a more  stainable Baltimore, growing green through habitat for humanity.

The practice of the design process is practiced when it is painted on brick buildings. In museums and it is painted on shirts in a  graphic design form.When I am doing design research I research about  how many photoshop and illustrator paint brushes I can find I also research the different art museums I can travel to as well as broaden my horizons  in different media I want to use. I researching what type is important because it starts a structure of design work. There is much to learn from the D Talks community as well as volunteer opportunity’s to talk design in a design based community.

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1.) http://www.johnpaulcaponigro.com/blog/3097 Last accessed April 5, 2014

2.)http://mentalfloss.com/sites/default/files/styles/insert_main_wide_image/public/trees_7.jpg Last accessed April 5,2014

3.)http://www.zdom.com/art/contemporarypaintings.jpg Last accessed April 7, 2014

WSR Interview with Harry Bertoia NewsCast.

--Harry Bertoia

WSR NewsCast

“If you look at these chairs, they are mainly made of air, like sculpture. Space passes right through them.” 

-Harry Bertoia 

 Saade:  “ I am here with Harry Bertoia”. The Artist, and The Philosopher, “Hello Art History class of Stevenson University my name is Saade J. Matthews I am a Visual Arts and Communication and Design student. I am joined here with Mr. Harry Bertoia, 

“Did I pronounce that correct Mr. Bertoia?”

Harry Bertoia:

“Yes, you pronounced that corrected you have a nice autentico pronunciation.

 Saade:

” Thank you so much!” I am used to speaking some French and Spanish but noone has ever said that I had a nice Italian accent before. grazie mille”!

Saade: 

” I spoke with your daughter, Lesta and son Val, this morning the two stated you were visiting back in your hometown of San Lorenzo, Friull Italy?…How are you today on this misty but beautiful morning? 

“Harry Bertoia:”

 I am great today, thank you very much, Saade!”.

Saade:

“Mr. Bertoia  What professional background do you profess to be to the world”?

Harry Bertoia:

” Nice Question I profess to be a , Printmaker, Jeweler, furniture designer and Sculptor as well as Philosopher.”

Saade:

  Mr. Bertoia that is a very inspirational to all artistic students Mr. Bertoia, ” How much strength in your design process did you build when Knoll introduced The Bertoia Diamond chair series in 1952?

 

Harry Bertoia:

  I gained a lot of momentum and strength from when I introduced my first chair. I made sure all the live production was done for the Items. I remember setting up my shop in a old fume escaping and inhaling garage building.”

Saade:

 Mr. Bertoia, I commend you on your work that you have done with the Diamond chair. Does it feel amazing to have several of your work chairs completed designs for Knolls?

Mr. Bertoia:

Yes, Miss. Matthews he compensated me very generously and my work was very popular and part of the ” modern” furniture movement. I was able to purchase my dream farmhouse I was renting to become a owner of a house!

Saade:

 “Mr. Bertoia, I want to also congratulate you on your first architectural sculpture commission that you earned in 1953 for the Motors Technical Center, thanks to your fellow designer  Cranbook pal Eero Saarinen. It made its debut placed on the altar in the Boston, Massachusetts Institute of Technology Chapel shortly after you earned your commission in 1953, that is a foreshadowing of amazing strength and perseverance.”

Saade:

“What do you think was one of your weakness from your successful lifestyle?”

Mr. Bertoia:

Saade, I think one of my weaknesses from my lifestyle was spending a lot of time around materials of beryllium copper and toxic fumes, I think that contributed to my lung cancer that will not expel out of my body.”

Saade:

“Mr Bertoia what do you think was a Opportunity  that you had in your life to become so successful as a Printmaker, Jeweler, furniture Designer, Sculptor as well as Philosopher?”

Mr. Bertoia: ” That’s another great question, Saade, as a Italian born American. I came to the great United States of America searching for the American dream, where I can image my future and design my career like the motto that you use as a Wild Stang at Stevenson University. I wanted to live my dream to become a painter as well as design brides wedding day linen and  embroidery patterns. I wanted to use my opportunity to gather scholarship money from The Art School of Detroit to enrich my paint and drawing skills to enter local art competitions. America was my place to grow! Home of the free land of brave souls.”

Saade:

“What was a threat that you encountered throughout your career as a sculptor, jeweler, and print maker designer”?

Mr. Bertoia:

 “Saade, I encountered a threat of getting lung cancer, not spending time to maintain my chickens and cows and goats around my farm house. I also haven’t had time to teach other students, Negro or Caucasian the proper ascetics they need to have a better understanding on how to embroidery print and market themselves in America.”

Saade:

“Amazing statement Mr. Bertoia, it was a pleasure to meet you and speak to your daughter Lessa I know you were influenced by your mentors  Florence Shust ( Knolls), Charles Eames and Eero Saarinen.Thank you for doing a news-broadcast for the WildStang radio here at Stevenson University Grazie Mille! Very nice to meet you, the artist and philosopher Harry Bertoia.”

Mr. Bertoia: 

“ Nice to meet you as well, lovely lady Saade, best wishes to you young astute, successful lad”.

1.) http://www.dwr.com/category/designers/a-c/harry-bertoia.do last accessed: March 27, 2014

2.)http://www.bertoia-harry.com/ last accessed: March 27, 2014

3.)http://www.1stdibs.com/creators/harry-bertoia/furniture/ last accessed: March 27,2014

4.)http://www.skinnerinc.com/news/blog/harry-bertoia-sculpture-mit-chapel-in-miniature/ last accessed: March 27, 2014

5.)http://www.wright20.com/exhibitions/2014/1/harry-bertoia-sculpture: last accessed March 27, 2014

6.)http://www.memado.com/en/30_harry-bertoia last accessed:March 28, 2014

7.)http://www.dkgallery.com/artists/163/Harry-Bertoia last accessed: March 28, 2014

8.)http://www.retrostart.com/designer/harry-bertoia/  last accessed:March 28, 2014

9.)http://www.nest.co.uk/browse/designer/harry-bertoia last accessed: March 29, 2014

10.)http://www.r20thcentury.com/biography_detail.cfm?designer_id=47 last accessed: March 29,2014

 

11.) http://www.dwr.com/category/designers/a-c/harry-bertoia.do last accessed: March 27, 2014

12.)http://www.bertoia-harry.com/last accessed: March 27, 2014

13.)http://www.1stdibs.com/creators/harry-bertoia/furniture/ last accessed: March 27,2014

14.)http://www.skinnerinc.com/news/blog/harry-bertoia-sculpture-mit-chapel-in-miniature/ last accessed: March 27, 2014

15.)http://www.wright20.com/exhibitions/2014/1/harry-bertoia-sculpture: last accessed March 27, 2014

16.)http://www.memado.com/en/30_harry-bertoia last accessed:March 28, 2014

17.)http://www.dkgallery.com/artists/163/Harry-Bertoia last accessed: March 28, 2014

18.)http://www.retrostart.com/designer/harry-bertoia/  last accessed:March 28, 2014

19.)http://www.nest.co.uk/browse/designer/harry-bertoia last accessed: March 29, 2014

20.)http://www.r20thcentury.com/biography_detail.cfm?designer_id=47 last accessed: March 29,2014

21.)http://www.infurn.com/us/harry-bertoia last accessed March 29,2014

22.)http://www.design-museum.de/en/collection/100-masterpieces/detailseiten/diamond-chair-bertoia.html last accessed. March 29,2014

Analyzing Atomic Style Design

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Imagery Design forces are a images that are portrayed in a household through furniture and paintings.People consume products that are based upon their upbringing and cultural contributions. Atomic elements are also constructed in geometric shapes and there uses for elements red,cyan, and yellow elements also oval spaces,  lines and from my observation shapes are an inch away example of the plate located away for lines on each other. The directions of the shapes from atomic Style are very much in the principle of shape being of positive imagery. The texture of the oak wood is very rough, organic and not smooth in  Imagery Design as shown above in the picture of the cat with  inside the red briefcase example. Product designers can use  methods to compare differences between their original designs and the new green modules. Product Designer perform necessary design modifications to make  the design appeal to the consumer.A table lamp and a motor are used as case study examples to show the effectiveness of the atomic-theory-based green product design method. Atomic Design was a protection against radiation. Lava lamps were invented as well as computers were all sources of effective design from the Cold War era.  Pyrex was advertised in color mainly red, green, blue and yellow.Chef Boyaardee was founded by Ettore ” Hector”.To produce during War War 2 to shield from problems going on over seas in the Cold War from Germany. I gained a handful of information researching these topics of design.

1.)  http://www.Yahoo. “Yahoo.” Last modified March 11, 2009. http://www.etsy.com/

2.) http://www.yahoo.com accessed  March, 22 2014

3.)http://www.yahoo.com accessed March, 22, 2014

4.)http://www.yahoo.com last modified  March,  22 2013

5.)http:www.yahoo.com accessed  March, 22 2014

6.)http:yahoo.com accessed March, 22 2014

March D Center Presentation Talk for March 4th

Bellow is a beautiful example of a Lota pot.This beautiful pot below is full of gorgeous etchings.

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Lota Pot

The India Report and March speakers approaches  have in common  the fact that they have a strong desire for being motivated when it comes to  working.  The India report stated that  In each person’s mind you should  never become lazy in what you have to do to advance your life. And to think about the life of your loved ones. In everything you do you should be centered on a focused  and in thought or action in which you enjoy. While doing work you should  let go of anxiety and stay calm and make your work stand out. The information that I learned from reading the design culture India Report, was to make your design your own and have fun while you are making your design. I  learned from the D Talks that you can make design anywhere you want to with groups out on the street or in murals on a building like in Downtown Baltimore. It is  also great to have a support group that is helping you out throughout your design adventures.  The D Talks  was very helpful in getting an understanding of how you have to have grants and permits to take you to get a good amount of funding from your community to put on such art works at theater. It’s fun to start in small groups as well when creating theater. Getting  funding for different art theater programs would be a plus as well! I feel like I learned a great amount from reading the India report and its wonderful to see the different funding and opportunities that India Design companies are implementing as well. Theater in Arts in Baltimore as well is looking to be advanced.  I am looking forward to the next D. Talk and to go to one of the Single Carrot Theatre plays. I got more information about the shows after the talks.

Inventions that Challenged Social Behaviors 1925-1959

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1925 Leica A Camera

Leica A Camera The first popular 35-mm film camera. Form has remained a standard for digital age. The Leica A’s optics even retracted into the body when the camera was not in use, just like today’s compact shooters. It created a revolutionaized in photography in 1925. It offered a undreamed of freedom in artistic photography.

1929 Sunglasses

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In 1929, Sam Foster, founder of the Foster Grant company sold the first pair of Foster Grant sunglasses on the Boardwalk in Atlantic City, NJ. By 1930, sunglasses were all the rage. Trademark: Trademark filed November 3, 1959.  Sunglasses are visual aids which feature lenses that are colored or darkended or polarizing lenses to protect the eye from the sun’s glare.The popularity of sunglasses is really a twentieth-century phenomenon. And in America, the military, which played a role in the development of sunscreens, also was at the forefront of sunglass

1935 Anglepoise Original 1227 Task Light

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The ability to adapt to human whims, it has a ease of use, it is a rigid but flexable spring and lever.Lever mechanism created by George Cardwardine developed while designing car suspenstions. The Anglepoise can adjust to any angle you demand. And its industrial looking anthropomorphic at once.

1945 Interlocking Blocks

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Interlocking blocks, created by Englishman Hilary Fisher Page, were colored plastic bricks with studs on the top.Throughout the early and mid-1930’s he experimented with molding plastic toys, His partners, however, felt that plastics were simply too risky for the company, Especially one already in a difficult financial position and they persuaded him to form a new company for his experiments – British Plastic Toys Ltd.

1950 Pace Maker

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The pacemaker was invented by the Canadian John Hopps in 1950. John Hopps research as an electrical engineer discovered He was working with radio frequencies and how it can be used to bring up body temperature. It was then he learned that a heart that stops due to cooling can be restarted.The way to do it was with mechanical or electrical methods. This discovery helped him conceive of the pacemaker. His creation in 1950 though, could not be fitted in the body; it was the external type. In 1957, Earl Bakken of Minnesota invented a wearable pacemaker.This device was capable of modifying the pacing heart rate. It was linked to the skin via electrodes. This in turn was connected to the myocardium.In 1958 an implantable cardiac pacemaker was created in Karolinska University in Sweden. The pacemaker used was created by Rune Elmqvist. The first recipient of an implantable pacemaker was Arne Larson. He received a total of 26 pacemakers in his life before dying in 2001 at the age of 86.

1959 Invention of the Barbie Doll

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Invention of BarbieThe first Barbie doll character was a teenage fashion model called Barbie Millicent Roberts. The doll  has since had more than 125 different characters including a doctor, astronaut, businesswoman, police officer,  and athlete. Barbie has holds  the title of the most popular fashion doll ever created.  One of the most famous toys in American history, the Barbie doll is a example in the toy chests of little girls everywhere. Along with co-founding the renowned toy company Mattel, woman inventor Ruth Handler also designed the doll that would become an American cultural icon.While watching her daughter play with paper dolls.

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1939 First Electric Guitar 

The first electric guitar to have commercial success was the Rickenbacker “Frying Pan” in 1932, a model played on the musician’s lap. At first, since it sounded nothing like an acoustic, this guitar took a while to be embraced. At that time, other people were experimenting with the idea of a new variation on the electric guitar. One step in this direction was Les Paul’s guitar, constructed on a piece of pine, called “The Log.” The development of the solid-body electric guitar was a major development. In 1950, Leo Fender developed such a guitar for mass production. Next, Gibson unveiled its own solid-body electric guitar. From the 1950s onward, rock musicians made Gibson, Les Paul, Fender and Rickenbacker became famous.

1.)         http://us.leica-camera.com/culture/history/ lastaccessed March 6,2014

2.)        http://www.momastore.org/webapp/wcs/stores/servlet/ProductDisplay_Anglepoise-Original-Lamp-1228_10451_10001_162179_-1_26663_45667/ lastaccessed March 6, 2014

3.)        http://www.brightontoymuseum.co.uk/wiki/Category:Kiddicraft’ last accessed March 6,2014

4.)        http://www.innovateus.net/invention/cardiac-pacemaker last accessed March 6,2014

5.)        http://www.dolls4play.com/barbiehistory.html last accessed March 6, 2014

6.)        http://www.barbiemedia.com/about-barbie/history/1960s.html last accessed March 6, 2014

7.)        http://www.cameraquest.com/leicaa.htm Last accessed March 6, 2014

8.)        http://leicarumors.com/2011/11/23/what-is-the-value-of-this-vintage-leica-i-camera.aspx/9.)http://www.essortment.com/john-hopps-invented-pacemaker-27221.html Last accessed March 6, 2014

9.)http://www.essortment.com/john-hopps-invented-pacemaker-27221.html Last accessed March 6, 2014

10.) https://www.anglepoise.com/about Last accessed March 6, 2014

11.) http://answers.ask.com/health/addictions/who_invented_sunglasses Last accessed March 6, 2014

12.)http://www.owappleton.com/ElectricGtrs.html Last accessed March 6, 2014

 

 

Universaille Worlds Fair 1920s.

Hugo Ball

Hugo Ball

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The German Artist and poet  Hugo Ball’s final performance at the Cabaret Voltaire in Zurich marked the beginning of a new genre variously known as sound poems, poems without words, or abstract poems. To construct them language is broken down into its abstract parts syllables and letters reconfigured as meaningless sounds. Poems in which multiple languages are read at once rendering each unintelligible offered an alternative approach to abstract poetry. By destroying everyday language, soundpoems offered both a metaphor for the destruction caused by war and a commentary on the deceitfulness of language. Wariness of the competing nationalisms that fueled the war also led Dadaists to resist any particular language, a primary indicator of national identity.

James Joyce

james-joyce

 A Irish Born Novelist Joyce was born at 41 Brighton Square, Rathgar, Dublin, on 2 February 1882. His father invested unwisely, and the family’s fortunes declined steadily. Joyce graduated from University College, Dublin, in 1902; briefly studied medicine in Paris, but his mother’s death brought him back to Dublin. In 1904, Joyce began Stephen Hero, which he later reworked as A Portrait of the Artist as a Young ManA_Portrait_of_the_Artist_as_a_Young_Man_by_James_Joyce

He also met Nora Barnacle,428202-110813-nora-barnacle

a chambermaid, and on 16 June 1904 they went walking at Ringsend, at the Liffey’s mouth; Joyce later chose that date for the events recorded in Ulysses. Having briefly shared a Martello tower at Sandycove, Co Dublin, with Oliver StJohn Gogarty, he sailed from Dublin with Nora inOctober 1904. Joyce found work in a language school in Trieste. In 1909, he made two trips to Dublin, to arrange publication of Dubliners, and to open a short-lived cinema. Ulysses, was his masterpiece. Serialised in New Yorkin 1918-20, but was eventually halted by a court action. Joyce returned to Trieste in 1919, then moved to Paris, where in 1922 Ulysses

Joyce Ulysses 750 wraps 1000

was published by Sylvia Beach, owner of a celebrated bookshop.

Its portrait of Dublin, and of the Jewish advertisement canvasser Leopold Bloom, revolutionized the novel with its ‘stream of consciousness’ technique;it was not published in Britain until 1936. In 1923, Joyce began the almost impenetrable Finnegans Wake, which was published in 1939. Joyce and Nora finally married in 1931, and in 1940 returned to Zurich, Switzerland before his death in January 1941.ZurichView_small

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Marcel Proust

Marcel Proust

Monsieur Proust, born to very supportive parents living in Paris. Proust Father was a doctor and his mother came from a rich and cultured Jewish family. His literary talent became evident during his high school years. He began to frequent salons such as that of Mme. Arman, a friend of Anatole France. Under the patronage of the latter, Proust published in 1896 his first book, Les Plaisirs et les Jours, a collection of short stories, essays and poems. 

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Proust had begun in autumn 1895 a novel which he later abandoned in autumn 1899 and never finished. Published in 1952 as Jean Santeui719800580_tpl.

After this second setback, Proust devoted several years to translating and annotating the works of the English art historian John Ruskin. He published a number of articles on Ruskin,John-Ruskin-001

as well as two translations

La Bible d’Amiens in 19042940016510064_p0_v1_s260x420

In February of 1907 he published in Le Figaro an article entitled “Sentiments filiaux d’un parricide”, in which he set out to analyze two elements.

Early in 1908 Proust wrote for Le Figaro

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a series of pastiches in which he imitated the style of Balzac, Michelet, Flaubert, Sainte-Beuve and other prose writers of the nineteenth century.

During this time he began his novel, although he fully intended to continue to write essays of literary, artistic and sociological criticism. One of these he was devoted to was Sainte-Beuve. In May of 1913 he adopted for this novel the title À la recherche du temps perdu.

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Works Cited

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2.)http://www.library.illinois.edu/kolbp/proust/ accessed Feb 22,2014

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8.)http://members.peak.org/~dadaist/English/Graphics/ball.html accessed Feb 22, 2014

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