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Fantastic Memories»rank:by: Sandoz Maurice
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Fantastic Memories»rank: 4917452by: Maurice Sandoz
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Fantastic Memories»rank: 4039857by: Maurice Sandoz; (Illustrator) Salvador Dali
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Gaudí the Visionary Followed by 'Gaudí's Artistic and Religious Vision'»rank: 4039857by: Robert; Prévost, Clovis; Pujols, Francesc; Dali, Salvador (preface by); Alavedra, Joan (introduced by) Descharnes
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Gods in Exile: Salvador Dali, Albert Oehlen and Others»rank: 3458865by: Salvador Dali, Albert Oehlen
: :Albert Oehlen takes on the myth of the artist. Brushy works on canvas by the German-born, Spain-based painter are reproduced alongside paintings, photographs and collages by his surprising historical heroes, Karel Teige, Salvador Dali, Arnold Bocklin and Christian Ludwig Attersee. |
Grand Street 73: Delusions (Grand Street)»rank: 2310983by: Don DeLillo, Salvador Dali, Edward P. Jones, Gillian Wearing, Major Jackson, Alice Oswald
: :In Grand Street's spring 2004 issue, lies, tricks, and deceit speak louder than truth. Edward P. Jones invokes the grand deceiver, the Devil himself, in his new short story 'The Devil Swims Across the Anacostia River.' Don Delillo riffs on Glenn Gould, Thelonius Monk, Thomas Bernhard, and the bleak isolation of creative vision. In a newly translated selection from his novel Distant Star, Roberto Bolano recounts the literary and revolutionary travails of the enigmatic Chilean author Juan Stein. While Barcelonan Enrique Vila-Matas, in Bartleby & Co., tracks the history of artists who, in the end, 'prefer not to.' Also in this issue are: photographs of Edward James's surrealist sanctuary Las Pozas; portfolios ... |
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Hidden Faces»rank: 2310983by: Salvador (translated by Haakon M Chevalier) Dali
: :In Grand Street's spring 2004 issue, lies, tricks, and deceit speak louder than truth. Edward P. Jones invokes the grand deceiver, the Devil himself, in his new short story 'The Devil Swims Across the Anacostia River.' Don Delillo riffs on Glenn Gould, Thelonius Monk, Thomas Bernhard, and the bleak isolation of creative vision. In a newly translated selection from his novel Distant Star, Roberto Bolano recounts the literary and revolutionary travails of the enigmatic Chilean author Juan Stein. While Barcelonan Enrique Vila-Matas, in Bartleby & Co., tracks the history of artists who, in the end, 'prefer not to.' Also in this issue are: photographs of Edward James's surrealist sanctuary Las Pozas; portfolios ... |
Hidden Faces»rank: 2310983by: Salvador Dalis
: :In Grand Street's spring 2004 issue, lies, tricks, and deceit speak louder than truth. Edward P. Jones invokes the grand deceiver, the Devil himself, in his new short story 'The Devil Swims Across the Anacostia River.' Don Delillo riffs on Glenn Gould, Thelonius Monk, Thomas Bernhard, and the bleak isolation of creative vision. In a newly translated selection from his novel Distant Star, Roberto Bolano recounts the literary and revolutionary travails of the enigmatic Chilean author Juan Stein. While Barcelonan Enrique Vila-Matas, in Bartleby & Co., tracks the history of artists who, in the end, 'prefer not to.' Also in this issue are: photographs of Edward James's surrealist sanctuary Las Pozas; portfolios ... |
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Hidden Faces»rank: 2310983by: Salvador Dali
: :In Grand Street's spring 2004 issue, lies, tricks, and deceit speak louder than truth. Edward P. Jones invokes the grand deceiver, the Devil himself, in his new short story 'The Devil Swims Across the Anacostia River.' Don Delillo riffs on Glenn Gould, Thelonius Monk, Thomas Bernhard, and the bleak isolation of creative vision. In a newly translated selection from his novel Distant Star, Roberto Bolano recounts the literary and revolutionary travails of the enigmatic Chilean author Juan Stein. While Barcelonan Enrique Vila-Matas, in Bartleby & Co., tracks the history of artists who, in the end, 'prefer not to.' Also in this issue are: photographs of Edward James's surrealist sanctuary Las Pozas; portfolios ... |
Ich und die Malerei»rank: 2310983by: Salvador Dali
: :In Grand Street's spring 2004 issue, lies, tricks, and deceit speak louder than truth. Edward P. Jones invokes the grand deceiver, the Devil himself, in his new short story 'The Devil Swims Across the Anacostia River.' Don Delillo riffs on Glenn Gould, Thelonius Monk, Thomas Bernhard, and the bleak isolation of creative vision. In a newly translated selection from his novel Distant Star, Roberto Bolano recounts the literary and revolutionary travails of the enigmatic Chilean author Juan Stein. While Barcelonan Enrique Vila-Matas, in Bartleby & Co., tracks the history of artists who, in the end, 'prefer not to.' Also in this issue are: photographs of Edward James's surrealist sanctuary Las Pozas; portfolios ... |