Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Davi Det Hompson (1939–1996), also known as David E. Thompson, born in Sharon, Pennsylvania, and raised in Warren, Ohio, [1] was a Fluxus book artist, [2] concrete poet, creator of mail art, [3] sculptor and painter living and working in Richmond, Virginia.
Dallas Observer is a free digital and print publication based in Dallas, Texas. [3] The Observer publishes daily online coverage of local news, restaurants, music, and arts, as well as longform narrative journalism. A weekly print issue circulates every Thursday.
This is a sortable list of Australian art critics who wrote for newspapers in the nineteenth [1] and twentieth centuries, a period in which such periodicals carried the majority of current, contemporaneous art criticism, [2] before most such papers ceased art reviews in the 21st century. [3] Hamilton [4] writes to distinguish this genre:
Main page; Contents; Current events; Random article; About Wikipedia; Contact us; Pages for logged out editors learn more
Launched as a fortnightly broadsheet in February 1949 by a retired country medical practitioner, Dr Richard Gainsborough, and the first edition was designed by his wife, the artist Eileen Mayo, [1] Arts News and Review set out to champion contemporary art in Britain, providing its readers with commentary, news and reviews. [2]
Some troops leave the battlefield injured. Others return from war with mental wounds. Yet many of the 2 million Iraq and Afghanistan veterans suffer from a condition the Defense Department refuses to acknowledge: Moral injury.
John T. Thompson, military officer, supervised development of the M1903 Springfield rifle and the M1911 pistol, inventor of the Thompson submachine gun Horace M. Trent , physicist best known for finding that a bull whip's crack is a sonic boom and for writing the currently accepted force-current analogy in physics known as the Trent analogy
Dr. James Bender, a former Army psychologist who spent a year in combat in Iraq with a cavalry brigade, saw many cases of moral injury among soldiers. Some, he said, “felt they didn’t perform the way they should. Bullets start flying and they duck and hide rather than returning fire – that happens a lot more than anyone cares to admit.”