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Mongolia: How a Small, Landlocked Country Dealt With the Pandemic

On the financial side, the government of Mongolia simply has less money to work with when it comes to addressing health issues. Under normal conditions, Amarsaikhan said, “There is a big gap between urban and rural development. Infrastructure is underdeveloped. We have poor quality of health services and inadequate health care access.” During the pandemic financial issues ....

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Surrealism Beyond Borders: Global Dreaming at the Met

Every movement of consequence, however far-reaching, has a beginning. Surrealism’s birth was full-blown from the mind of French poet Guillaume Apollinaire, who in 1917 was quoted about this new spirit in the air thusly: “When a man wanted to imitate walking, he invented the wheel, which does not look like a leg. Without knowing it, he was a Surrealist.” But it was Andre Breton ....

Puerto Rico , Al Qahirah , France General , Dominican Republic , El Salvador , United States , Alfred Hitchcock , Amaral Abaporu , Matthew Gale , Eva Sulzer , Leonora Carrington , Orson Welles , Eine Kleine Nachtmusik , Guillaume Apollinaire , Steven Zucker Flickr , Stephanie Dalessandro , Eugeniof Granell , Len Lye , Andre Breton , Skunder Boghossian , Max Ernst , Carlos Merida , Ted Joansis , Kogu Mayo , Herry Lawford Flickr , Remedios Varo ,

Murder Comes to the Holler in Chris Offutt's 'Killing Hills'

Mick Hardin, a military homicide investigator on leave from government service, has come home to try and salvage a failing marriage. He agrees to take part in the murder investigation led by his sister Linda, recently promoted to sheriff of Rocksalt. From there, the body count quickly escalates. Is the killer Curtis Tanner, arrested by an FBI agent on a tip called in by a ....

United States , Curtis Tanner , Mick Hardin , Nonnie Johnson , Chris Offutt , Killing Hills , Country Dark , Highbrow Magazine , Gabriel Ash ,

Jasper Johns at The Whitney: The Magician at Play

Death as a theme has a place in the artist’s obsessions. Later paintings depict skeletons as part of the imagery with a lightheartedness that makes one think the artist at 91 has come to terms with the issue of mortality. One work places the skeleton over an original silhouette of the artist from his own shadow. Another earlier and more somber image is based on a 1965 war ....

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Alice Neel -- a Collector of Souls – at the Met


 
I’m sure we’ve all heard the expression “S/he’s a people person.”  Alice Neel, whose long overdue retrospective
Alice Neel: People Come First, is currently drawing hordes of visitors at the Metropolitan Museum of Art.  It’s no surprise, considering she based her entire life and career around the intimates and strangers that surrounded her. Every class, race, and gender came under her razor-sharp gaze.  And no human being encountering her subjects comes away unscathed. 
 
Born in Merion Square, Pennsylvania, in 1900, Neel was obsessed with capturing the turmoil of her times. She was convinced that “people’s images reflect the era in a way that nothing else could.” True to this “anarchic humanist” as she defined herself, she depicted labor organizers like ....

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