Marcel Weyland

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    Speaking on the concepts of time, memory, and narrative, "Swann 's Way" by Marcel Proust creates a literary artwork bathed in the exploration of identity through achronological excerpts. Each recollection the narrator experiences are packed with a specific and intense contextual message, providing the audience with a unique reading experience. This paper will serve as an analysis of the construction of text observed in "Swann 's Way," followed by an explication of two passages of choice and an accompanying

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    is “The action or process of improving something until it is faultless.” In art, the striving for perfection has always been changing back and forth in a continuous cycle between realism and impressionism. Artworks that point to this idea include Marcel Duchamp’s Fountain, and Damien Hirst’s The Physical Impossibility of Death in the Mind of Someone Living. Through Duchamp’s work, the viewer gets a face-to-face interaction with something that is not only unpleasant to see in a high-status establishment

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    W.G. Sebald died in a car accident and his writing career were fairly short, however, during his lifetime he was one of the most innovated writer in the twentieth century. In the novel The Emigrants by W.G. Sebald translated by Michael Hulse, has many unique elements and style of the novel. The Emigrants are written through a narrator’s perception and intervention illustrating memories, civilization, nature and culture. Sebald is an author who wrote his books without a specific writing outline or

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    The 1920’s became an iconic era in the world of art as it was a generation that revolutionized the way art was defined all over the artistic and expressive world. The artistic elements of the Dada and Cubist movements were combined and manipulated to form and create the Surrealist movement, which was primarily rejected as an art movement due to its abnormality and synthetic representation, but its iconic ideas and unique techniques paved the way for a new form of art where artists developed a new

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    The Bauhaus Movement The first decades of the 20th century in modernism was characterised by enormous social and political changes with a radically changing lifestyle. Technology, manufacturing, science and art was the driving force. The Bauhaus movement was one of the most influential modern design movements of the 20th century reaching its peak between the two world wars. It was founded in 1919 in the city of Weimar in Germany by architect Walter Gropius. Although the Bauhaus was founded by an

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    Man Ray Research Paper

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    Home Selected Man Ray Artworks Man Ray's Biography Man Ray Quotes . Man Ray Paintings, Photography, and Quotes Sponsored Links Man Ray and his artworks Man Ray Portrait Man Ray, born Emmanuel Radnitzky in 1890 in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, was a renowned representative of avant-garde photography in the 20th century and is considered as the pioneer

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    Marcel Duchamp’s Fresh Widow was created in 1920, and is on display at the Museum of Modern Art (MoMA). Fresh Widow is a bluish green miniature French window, which he constructed with wood and leather. The Fresh Widow is considered to be a part of the Dadaist period and retains qualities of dadaism in that it is a stand alone object, that has been completely stripped of its utility and function. In addition, across the window sill, Duchamp wrote “COPYRIGHT” in capitalized black letters referring

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    The Surrealist Movement World War 1 was a gruesome point in history that led to immense carnage and anguish of millions. However, on a happier note, this dark time was followed by movements such as Cubism, Precisionism, and Expressionism. Among these movements existed Surrealism, a movement that would not have come to be without the influence of “the war to end all wars”. During World War 1 at the city of Nantes one would find a man named André Breton (Sandrow). André Breton, born in 1896, is regarded

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    Marcel Duchamp Tradition

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    even music bringing back the past. For example Marcel Duchamp was an artist that had a huge impact on the 20th century. He believed art should affect the mind, much less the eye. He created the "Fountain," which wasn't object rather than a painting. Although the art piece was denied

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    Good Afternoon Ms Atkinson and fellow peers, as you can see, the texts I have chosen to discuss with you are To the Lighthouse by Virginia Woolf, The Great Gatsby by F. Scott Fitzgerald and Lullaby by W. H . Auden, all of which have modernist themes, including conforming to traditional gender roles, time and love. To the Lighthouse revolves around the lives of the Ramsay family who are at their holiday house, hosting some guests, including Lily Briscoe (a painter) and Charles. The family are faced

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