Fachbuch aus dem Jahr 2011 im Fachbereich Kunst - Malerei; ; Sprache: Deutsch; Abstract: Mit dem Ehrentitel bdquo;Pionierin des Expressionismus in Deutschlandldquo; ging die Kuuml;nstlerin Paula Modersohn-Becker (1876ndash;1907); geborene Minna Hermine Paula Becker; in die Geschichte der Malerei ein. Innerhalb von knapp 14 Jahren; in denen sie kuuml;nstlerisch tauml;tig war; schuf sie 750 Gemauml;lde; etwa 1.000 Zeichnungen und 13 Radierungen; welche die bedeutendsten Aspekte der Kunst des fruuml;hen 20. Jahrhunderts in sich vereinen. Ihre beliebtesten Motive waren bauml;uerliche Frauen und Kinder; Selbstbildnisse und Stilleben. Sie vertrat die Auffassung: bdquo;Die Stauml;rke; mit der ein Gegenstand erfasst wird (Stilleben; Portrauml;ts oder Phantasiegebilde); das ist die Schouml;nheit in der Kunstldquo;. In der Literatur wird sie zuweilen auch bdquo;Paula Modersohnldquo; oder bdquo;Paula Becker-Modersohnldquo; genannt.
#2267171 in eBooks 2009-01-01 2009-01-01File Name: B007SM0JB8
Review
0 of 0 people found the following review helpful. Excellent Work.By ChandraSExcellent Read.1 of 1 people found the following review helpful. Great book for political science practitionersBy howard waysThis book offers an excellent behind the scene look at the collaborative leadership style of Governor Glendening which lead to the passage of a comprehensive Smart Growth policy in the State of Maryland.2 of 2 people found the following review helpful. The Life and Death of Smart GrowthBy P. TroutmanThis book is a relative rarity: an insiders perspective on state land use politics. The author describes the rise and very abrupt fall of one of the countrys most lauded Smart Growth initiatives. that of Maryland Governor Parris Glendening. This relatively short book -- the appendix starts on page 169 -- follows how Glendening came to the topic. how he and his staff creatively brought together a number of issues normally seen as isolated and turned them into a coherent reform policy. For people interested in Smart Growth. much of this is. in broad terms. well known. and what theyll get out of the book is a sense of how such policies are enacted on a day-to-day basis. how they interact with political concerns that seemingly have nothing to do with land use. So they might have heard the Maryland story. but they might not have known how this fit in with a governors reelection strategy or that a key issue was trying to come up with a way to visualize the problem and how no one in the state government had any pictures of the uglier parts of the state. City planners and policy wonks more generally will also likely appreciate the last chapter of insiders advice.What has the potential to intrigue people who arent interested in city planning or Maryland specifically is how swiftly everything collapsed. Its a pretty sobering story for anyone interested in politics or policy-making. I had known that data had shown the Maryland results were disappointing as far as stopping sprawl goes. but I hadnt realized how quickly the winds shifted once Glendening was termed out. That chapter has plenty of food for thought.The book is also unusual for a land use book in that it has pictures of the major political players. Collectively. theyre rather revealing. In looking at near monopoly of Caucasian faces. it makes it hard to believe that this book was describing the same state in which The Wire was set.One downside is that the font is small. which makes the book take a lot longer to read than the writing style or the length would suggest. (Academic books tend to run 36-37 lines a page. This ones got 45.)