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  1. Aug 22, 2013 · The most famous and noteworthy work of an author, composer, director, etc. is most commonly known as that persons magnum opus. Magnum opus is Latin for ‘great work’, and as the form magnum ‘great’ belies, opus ‘work’ is neuter in Latin.

    • Image and Identity. In the future, everyone will be world-famous for 15 minutes. Andy Warhol, Catalogue Moderna Museet, Stockholm. Andy Warhol is now an American cultural icon, and images of him are as famous as the art he created.
    • Money. I like money on the wall. Say you were going to buy a $200,000 painting. I think you should take that money, tie it up, and hang it on the wall. Then when someone visited you the first thing they would see is the money on the wall.
    • Death. Death was an important theme in Andy Warhol’s work from the early 1960s right up until his death in 1987. He said his interest in the subject came from his friend Henry Geldzahler, a curator at the Metropolitan Museum of Modern Art in New York.
    • Time. One of Warhol’s obsessions was time, and he spent much of his career exploring ways of capturing its passing. In his photographs, prints and paintings he could freeze a moment in time and repeat it over and over again, while in his films he documented and slowed time down.
  2. Aug 21, 2024 · Shakespeare’s most well-known poetry are his 154 sonnets, which were first published as a collection in 1609 and likely written as early as the 1590s.

  3. Even into his eighties and nineties, Picasso produced an enormous number of works and reaped the financial benefits of his success, amassing a personal fortune and a superb collection of his own art, as well as work by other artists.

  4. While he lived in London his entire life, except for three years spent in Felpham, he produced a diverse and symbolically rich collection of works, which embraced the imagination as "the body of God", or "human existence itself".

  5. Apr 2, 2014 · Who Was Geoffrey Chaucer? In 1357, Geoffrey Chaucer became a public servant to Countess Elizabeth of Ulster and continued in that capacity with the British court throughout his lifetime. The...

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  7. During his trip to Paris in 1921, Man Ray began to experiment with photography, and may have been introduced to the photogram by Tristan Tzara. He adopted the method and called his works "rayographs," photographic images composed of ordinary objects placed on photo sensitive paper exposed to light.

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