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Diego Rivera Museum - Anahuacalli (Mexico City - San Pablo Tepetlapa)
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Year: 1970 Publisher: Mexico City Organizing Committee of the Games of the XIX Olympiad

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Un Espace Diego Rivera à Lyon
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ISBN: 2841471959 Year: 2008 Publisher: Oullins Lyon Cité Création Editions Lyonnaises d'Art et d'Histoire

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Anahuacalli : Museo Diego Rivera
Year: 1965 Volume: 64-65 Publisher: Mexico : Artes de Mexico y del Mundo, S. A.,

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Frida Kahlo et Diego Rivera, l'art en fusion.
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ISBN: 9782754107181 2754107185 Year: 2013 Publisher: Malkoff : Hazan Musées d'Orsay et de l'Orangerie,

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Rarement exposées ensemble, les oeuvres de Frida Kahlo (1907-1954) et de Diego Rivera (1886-1957) racontent la vie d'un couple mythique, dont la légende a souvent dépassé la réputation artistique. Séparés par une différence d'âge de vingt ans, mariés deux fois, divorcés pendant un an, "l'éléphant et la colombe" (comme les appelaient les parents de Frida) furent incapables de vivre l'un sans l'autre. Leurs oeuvres diffèrent en bien des aspects : tandis que Diego, principal acteur du muralisme dans le Mexique postrévolutionnaire, couvrait des milliers de murs de ses fresques, messages adressés au peuple, Frida peignait de petits tableaux qui racontent sa vie intime. Leur travail n'en est pas moins complémentaire et trouve sa force commune dans la passion qui a caractérisé toute leur existence : passion pour la vie, qui n'a jamais quitté Frida malgré la souffrance causée par un terrible accident de bus, passion pour leur pays, à travers leur engagement politique et leurs références historiques, mythiques et symboliques, mais surtout passion qu'ils éprouvèrent l'un pour l'autre. Au-delà de la "mexicanité", qu'ils ont contribué à forger, leurs tableaux partagent une outrance provocatrice et libératoire, et tous deux surent transformer le personnel en mythe. De son travail de muraliste, incarnant les idéaux de la révolution, évoqué ici à travers ses dessins et des photographies, aux tableaux cubistes créés alors qu'il côtoyait le milieu artistique parisien, des oeuvres inspirées de l'histoire et des traditions mexicaines, Diego Rivera fut un artiste prolifique. On trouve dans son oeuvre un dialogue ininterrompu avec celle de Frida Kahlo, laquelle, sur fond d'évocation de la mythologie du Mexique, peignit ce qu'elle appelait sa "réalité" tragique et révoltée. Elle construisit son image de façon répétitive et quasi obsessionnelle, jusqu'à devenir une icône moderne.


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Atlas of cities
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ISBN: 1400851947 Year: 2014 Publisher: Princeton, New Jersey : Princeton University Press,

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A unique, stunningly illustrated look at the origins, development, and future prospects of citiesMore than half the world's population lives in cities, and that proportion is expected to rise to three-quarters by 2050. Urbanization is a global phenomenon, but the way cities are developing, the experience of city life, and the prospects for the future of cities vary widely from region to region. The Atlas of Cities presents a unique taxonomy of cities that looks at different aspects of their physical, economic, social, and political structures; their interactions with each other and with their hinterlands; the challenges and opportunities they present; and where cities might be going in the future.Each chapter explores a particular type of city—from the foundational cities of Greece and Rome and the networked cities of the Hanseatic League, through the nineteenth-century modernization of Paris and the industrialization of Manchester, to the green and "smart" cities of today. Expert contributors explore how the development of these cities reflects one or more of the common themes of urban development: the mobilizing function (transport, communication, and infrastructure); the generative function (innovation and technology); the decision-making capacity (governance, economics, and institutions); and the transformative capacity (society, lifestyle, and culture).Using stunning info-graphics, maps, charts, tables, and photographs, the Atlas of Cities is a comprehensive overview of the patterns of production, consumption, generation, and decay of the twenty-first century’s defining form.Presents a one-of-a-kind taxonomy of cities that looks at their origins, development, and future prospectsFeatures core case studies of particular types of cities, from the foundational cities of Greece and Rome to the "smart" cities of todayExplores common themes of urban development, from transport and communication to lifestyle and cultureIncludes stunning info-graphics, maps, charts, tables, and photosCities Featured:Abuja, Alexandria, Amsterdam, Athens, Augsburg, Babylon, Beijing, Berlin, Brasilia, Bruges, Budapest, Cairo, Canberra, Chandigarh, Chicago, Constantinople, Curitiba, Detroit, Dubai, Dublin, Düsseldorf, Florence, Frankfurt, Freiburg, Geneva, Ghent, Glasgow, Güssing, Hong Kong, Innsbruck, Istanbul, Jakarta, Karachi, Knossos, Las Vegas, London, Los Angeles, Lübeck, Manchester, Marseille, Masdar City, Mexico City, Miami, Milan, Mumba, Mumbai, Nairobi, New York, Paris, Pella, Portland, Rome, San Francisco, Santorini, São Paulo, Seoul, Shanghai, Sheffield, Singapore, Sparta, St. Petersburg, Stockholm, Sydney, Syracuse, Tokyo, Vancouver, Venice, Vienna, Washington, D.C., Wildpoldsried

Keywords

Urbanization --- Metropolitan areas --- Cities and towns --- Bangkok. --- Beijing. --- Bollywood. --- Bruges. --- Byzantium. --- Caracas. --- Carbon footprint. --- Celebrity culture. --- Central London. --- Central business district. --- Centre Georges Pompidou. --- Champagne fairs. --- Chapter 9. --- Chicago school (architecture). --- China. --- City-state. --- City. --- CityLife (Milan). --- Classical Athens. --- Colonial exhibition. --- Commercial Revolution. --- Constantinople. --- Construction. --- Contemporary society. --- Conurbation. --- Cosmopolitanism. --- Creative class. --- Cycling. --- Deindustrialization. --- Developed country. --- Dharavi. --- Diego Rivera. --- Economic development. --- Economic growth. --- Electronic Road Pricing. --- Entrepreneurship. --- Fashion in Milan. --- Fatih. --- Federal district. --- Financial Times. --- Gentrification. --- Global city. --- Globalization. --- Governance. --- Green economy. --- Guangzhou. --- Haussmann's renovation of Paris. --- High-speed rail. --- Hinterland. --- Ho Chi Minh City. --- Home appliance. --- Housing development. --- Industrialisation. --- Infrastructure. --- Inward investment. --- Kolkata. --- Kuala Lumpur. --- Latin America. --- Latin American integration. --- Living lab. --- Long Walls. --- Masdar City. --- Mediterranean Sea. --- Megacity. --- Merchant capitalism. --- Metropolitan area. --- Mexico City. --- Michael Bloomberg. --- Modernity. --- Mumbai. --- New York City. --- Overurbanization. --- Public transport. --- Real estate bubble. --- Residential area. --- Restaurant. --- Retail. --- Roman Empire. --- Rue de Rivoli. --- Secondary city. --- Seoul. --- Service economy. --- Slum. --- Suburb. --- Suburbanization. --- Sustainability. --- Sustainable city. --- Swinging London. --- Technology. --- The Economist. --- The Iconic. --- Tourism. --- Urban geography. --- Urban planning. --- Urban renewal. --- Urban revolution. --- Urban sprawl. --- Urbanization. --- Wealth. --- Welser.


Book
Postcards from Absurdistan : Prague at the end of history
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ISBN: 0691239517 Year: 2022 Publisher: Princeton : Princeton University Press,

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"This book is the third in a trilogy that looks at the cultural history of Prague in order to tell the larger story of competing notions of European modernity-Reformation and Counter-Reformation, empire and nation, fascism and democracy-as they all played out on a single stage. This volume begins in 1938, when Czechoslovakia was dismembered by the Munich agreement and shortly before the invasion of the Third Reich, and it runs until the present day, when liberal democracy appears to be giving way to right-wing populism (as in much of the world). Like the previous volumes in the series, it sees Prague as a palimpsest of the cultures that overtook it-cultures that aimed to impose their own visions of modernity on the city. In this book, Sayer charts three major "modernities:" the Third Reich's brutal totalitarianism, the shifting face of Soviet communism, and the supposed freedoms of Western capitalist democracy. In Sayer's reading, the Nazis, Soviets, and Western democrats each believed that Prague had reached the end of history, that it had achieved "the final form of human government" (in Fukuyama's words). All were proved spectacularly wrong. As these political movements disintegrated, they returned the city to a state of banal surreality that Czech dissidents in the 1960s dubbed Absurdistan. Putting the notion of Absurdistan at the center of his story, Sayer engages with artists, creators and the things they produced, which unsparingly revealed the absurdity of the "modern" world and its notions of progress. He explores the work of Milan Kundera, Miloš Forman, Václav Havel, and many others lesser known in the Anglophone world. He examines the tradition of vulgar absurdist comedy beginning with Kafka, and he shows how Prague's cultural products have been marked by persistent moral ambiguity, or in Kundera's words, "the intoxicating relativity of human things," since the mid-century. The overarching argument of this book is that, by looking to Prague's cultural history, we can see that modernity has never been a single or stable notion, and as different ideologies of modernity have come head-to-head, they have produced a rich culture of ambiguity and absurdity. We published the first two books in the trilogy, The Coasts of Bohemia: A Czech History (1998), which spanned the 18th to the turn of the 20th century, and Prague, Capital of the Twentieth Century (2013), which looked at modernism and revolutionary thinking in Prague in the first half of the 20th century. Both books did well, and Prague, Capital of the Twentieth Century won the prestigious George L. Mosse Prize for European cultural and intellectual history from the American Historical Association"--

Keywords

Prague (Czech Republic) --- Civilization --- 1948 Czechoslovak coup d'état. --- Absurdistan. --- Adolf Eichmann. --- Adolf Hitler. --- Allen Ginsberg. --- Anschluss. --- Arid. --- Bankruptcy. --- Bohumil Hrabal. --- Byzantine Empire. --- Cactus. --- Central Committee. --- Charles Darwin. --- Charter 77. --- Closely Watched Trains. --- Colonization. --- Conrad Veidt. --- Constantinople. --- Czechoslovak Hockey Riots. --- Czechoslovakia. --- Czechs. --- Diego Rivera. --- Distant Journey. --- Dora Diamant. --- Ecology. --- Economics. --- Egon Bondy. --- El Niño–Southern Oscillation. --- Endemism. --- Epiphyte. --- Essay. --- Franz Kafka. --- Franz Werfel. --- Geology. --- Germans. --- Gestapo. --- Giant tortoise. --- Gulag. --- Hadrian. --- Heinrich Himmler. --- Heinrich Mann. --- Honza. --- Hussites. --- Iconoclasm. --- Illustration. --- International Students' Day. --- Jan Masaryk. --- Jan Palach. --- Jews. --- Joseph Stalin. --- Karel Gott. --- Karel Teige. --- Karl Marx. --- Kitsch. --- Klement Gottwald. --- Le Corbusier. --- Lecture. --- Libri Carolini. --- Lidice. --- Mangrove. --- Max Brod. --- Milan Kundera. --- Milton Friedman. --- Modernity. --- Money laundering. --- Nazi Party. --- Nazism. --- Newspaper. --- Nikephoros (Caesar). --- Ocean current. --- On the Origin of Species. --- Opuntia. --- Pavel Kohout. --- Physiocracy. --- Poetry. --- Politics. --- Prague Spring. --- Presidium. --- Reinhard Heydrich. --- Samizdat. --- Scalesia. --- Slavery. --- Slovakia. --- Socialist realism. --- South America. --- Soviet Union. --- Sudeten Germans. --- Surrealism. --- Tariff. --- The Book of Laughter and Forgetting. --- The Other Hand. --- The Power of the Powerless. --- The Theory of Moral Sentiments. --- The Voyage of the Beagle. --- The Wealth of Nations. --- V. --- Wealth. --- Wenceslas Square. --- World War II. --- Writing.

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