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Liv Ballard, of Los Angeles, CA, had always been passionate about art and art history. She loved pottery, ceramics, collecting vintage jewelry, speaking French. Then she got married, and stepped ...
Liv Blåvarp (born 1956) is a Norwegian artisan who is known for her jewellery, especially her beautifully sculptured, spirally-shaped necklaces and bracelets consisting of small pieces of wood. Since the mid-1990s, Blåvarp has gained international recognition for her creations and is now represented in the leading art museums of Scandinavia ...
As soon as the publication of Miracles was announced in 2007, Ballard scholars and experts looked forward to it, expecting it to clarify some aspects of Ballard's life that had been fictionally reworked in his previous books, especially in the partly autobiographical novel Empire of the Sun and in the autofiction The Kindness of Women. Ballard ...
The Kindness of Women is a 1991 novel by British author J. G. Ballard, a sequel to his 1984 novel Empire of the Sun. The Kindness of Women drew on the author's boyhood in Shanghai during World War II, presenting a lightly fictionalized treatment of Ballard's life from Shanghai through to adulthood in England, culminating with an account of the making of Steven Spielberg's 1987 film Empire of ...
Ashley Stobart, UK-based influencer, entrepreneur and co-host of the Nip Tuck podcast, is opening up about her controversial decision to get a facelift at 34.. Stobart tells PEOPLE that during her ...
“The existing evidence suggests that this compound can cause liver, developmental, blood and endocrine effects in the human body,” Jamie Alan, an associate professor of pharmacology and ...
Liv Morgan has reached the pinnacle of professional wrestling — but she wasn’t sure she was ever going to make it there. In an exclusive interview with Us Weekly, the WWE women’s world ...
The unexamined life is not worth living" is a famous dictum supposedly uttered by Socrates at his trial for impiety and corrupting youth, for which he was subsequently sentenced to death. The dictum is recorded in Plato's Apology (38a5–6) as ho dè anexétastos bíos ou biōtòs anthrṓpōi (but the unexamined life is not lived by man) ( ὁ ...