Highlights
A collection of news and information related to Salvador Dali published by Tribune Company sources.
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Bluesman Watermelon Slim 'swims against the tide'
Of The Morning CallWatermelon Slim is spending a day off in Lawrenceville, a small Tioga County town in north-central Pennsylvania along the New York border with one traffic light and a population of less than 700. Over the last few years the politically-minded singer,...Tags: Musikfest, North Carolina, Colleges and Universities, Bethlehem (Bethlehem, Pennsylvania), Music Industry
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Dali sketch
Source: “Dali” by Robert RadfordHighlights from the Surrealist world of Salvador Dali: Birth: May 11, 1904, in Figueres, Spain First public exhibit: 1919 at the Municipal Theatre in Figueres In New York: Exhibited first work in a New York gallery in 1931 Marries: Gala Eluard in...Tags: Death and Dying, New York
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'Federico Fellini: The Book of Dreams'
ANYONE familiar with the films of Federico Fellini knows that he gave importance to dreams. But the extent of that devotion has become fully evident only now, with the publication of "Il Libro dei Sogni" -- "The Book of Dreams." These sketches, mostly...Tags: Movies, Book, Sophia Loren, Cinema Industry, Anita Ekberg
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Hotel clock melts back to Dali's days as guest
Tribune correspondentNEW YORK — Manhattan's famed Plaza Hotel has the fictional Eloise. The Hilton will always have Paris (the heiress not the city). And The St. Regis hotel in New York has Salvador Dali. Few may know that the celebrity artist, instantly recognizable...Tags: Government, Manhattan (New York City), Tourism and Leisure, Movies, Museum of Modern Art
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Wynton Marsalis and the Lincoln Center Jazz Orchestra at the Hollywood Bowl
Special to The TimesWynton Marsalis describes the big jazz band as "the American orchestra." It's an intriguing and, in many ways, definitive identification of the instrumental collective that has been a foundation ensemble of American jazz and popular music for more than 80...Tags: Popular Music, Willie Nelson, Culture, Billy Strayhorn, Lincoln Center
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'Project Runway': rating the first runway
Reality CheckProject Runway is back for its last season in the Big Apple and its last season on Bravo. This disappoints me: The show is moving to the Lifetime network, and, apparently, Los Angeles next year. L.A.? Sure, the City of......Tags: House and Home, Michael Kors, Heidi Klum, Los Angeles
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'Sand' at Parrish, Buckminster Fuller at Whitney
Special to NewsdaySand: Memory, Meaning and Metaphor (June 29-Sept. 14 at Parrish Art Museum, Southampton). We play in it, loll on it, build castles out of it, and wash it out of our hair, but what, exactly, does sand mean? Its physical and metaphysical significance is...Tags: Alfred Hitchcock, Natural Science, Henri Cartier-Bresson, Manhattan (New York City), Whitney Museum
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Rediscovering the Heckscher Museum of Art
robert.kahn@newsday.comThe Expressionist-era canvas that some curators unabashedly call "the most famous painting on Long Island" returned to Huntington this month after two years at the Met, where it was cleaned and brightened, and later included as part of an exhibit on...Tags: George Grosz, Gardens and Parks, Meteorological Disasters, Tourism and Leisure, Cindy Sherman
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Jeff Koons' Manhattan home is mixture of beautiful and mundane
Special to the TribuneIn 1975, long before he became a household name, Jeff Koons spent a year in Chicago as a student at the School of the Art Institute of Chicago, as well as a studio assistant to Ed Paschke. "I believe it's really important that you're able, in art, to...Tags: Game Playing, Manhattan (New York City), Lakeview, Arts, Painting
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Landscapes are the draw at National Gallery
Special to The TimesFOR much of the 19th century, scores of French painters, laden with knapsacks and portable easels, trekked through the Forest of Fontainebleau to capture the shifting wonders of nature with their brushes right on the spot. Some came for weekends; some...Tags: Gardens and Parks, Cartoons, Tourism and Leisure, Natural Resources, Arts
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St. Petersburg, Florida, is thinking young
The Washington PostIf God sticks around St. Petersburg, he's going to be waiting a while. The Florida town once known as the last exit before the pearly gates is looking more youthful these days, thanks to an influx of younger people taking their place alongside the more...Tags: Washington Post Company, Game Playing, JetBlue, Justice System, Air Transportation
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Ray Wise having a devil of a time on 'Reaper'
McClatchy/Tribune newspapers: The Fresno BeeTelevision and film actor Ray Wise has certainly played some devilish characters over the years, prime among them his role as Leland Palmer on the quirky drama "Twin Peaks." Wise finally has gotten his chance to play the devil himself. That's his...Tags: Television, Values, Movies, David Lynch, John Huston
Aug 16, 2008
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Jul 22, 2008
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Jun 8, 2008
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Jul 11, 2008
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Jul 18, 2008
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May 25, 2008
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Apr 22, 2008
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May 25, 2008
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Apr 20, 2008
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Oct 28, 2007
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Dec 18, 2007
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