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The Brasserie Lipp was opened in 1880 by Léonard Lipp and his wife Pétronille.
In July 1920, Marcellin Cazes redesigned the brasserie, which had become frequented by poets such as Paul Verlaine and Guillaume Apollinaire. In 1935, he established the Prix Cazes, a literary prize awarded each year to an author who has won no other literary prize.
It's perhaps best known for its association with Ernest Hemingway, who wrote about his meals of bread with olive oil, potato salad and large beers in "A Moveable Feast."
The brasserie is currently owned by Groupe Bertrand of Auvergne, who also owns Angelina tea house on the Rue de Rivoli. (I've an idea I read somewhere that JK Rowling stops at Angelina's when she's in Paris for one of their outstanding hot chocolates).
EH and Mary shared this portible royal...Mary wrote her book 'How it Was' on this portible, EH wrote some of Garden of Eden and Moveable Feast on the Royal.
The very same hotel and bar where Ernest Hemingway lived and drank his mojitos. Hemingway is said to have penned "For Whom the Bell Tolls" here.
by navema
10th Street & Broadway, NYC
Three dozen brightly colored, felt heads impaled on wooden posts populate five windows on a bustling New York City intersection. Among the menagerie are imagined creatures, American icons, high school crushes, and self-portraits. The resulting spectacle unravels the invented and extant, the beautiful and the grotesque, what we desire and what we fear. Adam Parker Smith's Bold As Love, an installation inspired by an execution scene in Ernest Hemingway's For Whom the Bell Tolls, mischievously reveals how we perform, aestheticize, and consume violence.
We are no strangers to public displays of violence. Our histories and myths are crowded with tales of executions as sport or as warning, enacted for country or for love. In his novel set during the Spanish Civil War, Hemingway fictionalized the horrific real-life execution of fascist sympathizers in the town of Ronda in 1936. In a pivotal scene, accused fascists are gathered up by their neighbors, held captive, flayed, and herded off a cliff. With the protagonists as the perpetrators, we comprehend the celebration and horror of the act.
These contradictory emotions are conjured in Smith's installation. Passersby are arrested by the theatrics, beauty, and humor of the spectacle; only after closer inspection do they perceive the underlying horror of the scene. "That is the beauty of it," one of Hemingway's peasants explains, "there must be many blows."
Bold As Love was initiated through Smith's collaboration with Chicago-area high school students at the Blue Sky Project artists residency program. The series has been re-contextualized in Broadway Windows. The curators collaborated with Smith to construct a head, which is also on view.
Bold as Love is the final project for Curatorial Praxis, a graduate course offered by the Visual Arts Administration Program in the NYU Steinhardt School's Department of Art and Art Professions.
BROADWAY WINDOWS
Founded in 1984 as a gallery dedicated to providing 24-hour art viewing for both pedestrian and vehicular traffic, Broadway Windows is strongly committed to the goal of bringing contemporary art to a new and ever-growing viewing public. Site specific installations of all imaginable media grace the five showcase windows located at the corner of Broadway and East Tenth Street.
Antinea Media Fotografía
Birth place of Ernest Hemingway at Oak Park
Más info en www.antineamedia.com
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Located in the hamlet of Horton Bay Michigan along the shores of Lake Charlevoix. Horton Bay is where Ernest Hemingway spent time as a youth and where he married his first wife.
For the record, chronic back problems prevented the great author from sitting much himself; a secretary would take diction and type out the books while Hemingway paced around the room. Seen at his home in Key West, FL. July 2007.
Ernest Hemingway's boat, Pilar.
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Like this picture ? Have a look at my Cuba collection for more.
In una delle piazze clou del Visa Festival a Perpignan ci siamo imbattuti con sorpresa in un angolo insolitamente appartenente a un'altra epoca e ad un altro luogo. Una coloratissima bottega anzi "bodeguita" come quelle presenti in tutti i porti caraibici, dove i pescatori si ritrovano per un buon bicchiere di rhum e per un avventuroso racconto di una battuta di pesca. Tutto contribuiva a richiamare una suggestiva atmosfera cubana anni ’50 e ’60... Il suo gestore un autentico personaggio emerso da un racconto di Ernest Hemingway, seduto davanti al negozio, con fare noncurante ma attento.
«Il vecchio era magro e scarno e aveva rughe profonde alla nuca. Sulle guance aveva le chiazze del cancro della pelle provocato dai riflessi del sole sul mare tropicale e le mani avevano cicatrici profonde, che gli erano venute trattenendo con le lenze i pesci pesanti...».
Perpignan, Francia - settembre 2007
Aligned with their white marble the War graves of fallen British and Allied forces who fought on Italian soil during the Second World War.
Note: Additional photos have been published on the book PASSEGGIATE A LEVANTE by Enrico Pelos. One of the walkings is an itinerary that allows you to enter the Staglieno Monumental Cemetery and visit some of the most famous tombs with news maps and information.
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Allineate con i loro marmi bianchi le Tombe dei Caduti Guerra Inglesi e delle forze Alleate che hanno combattuto sul suolo italiano durante la Seconda Guerra Mondiale.
Nota:Altre fotografie sono state pubblicata sul libro PASSEGGIATE A LEVANTE DI Enrico Pelos. Una delle Passeggiate è prprio un itinerario che permette di entrare nel Cimitero Monumentale di Staglieno e di visitare alcune delle tombe più famose con notizie, cartina e informazioni.
French chandeliers installed in the house by Pauline Hemingway - these replaced the original ceiling fans and, as the guide commented, "Every day I look at those chandeliers and think of Pauline".
The house was built by Asa Tift, a marine architect (and Confederate mariner), in 1851. In 1931 Hemingway purchased it and lived here with his second wife, Pauline, and their two sons until 1939.
Here, Hemingway completed the final draft of "A Farewell to Arms," as well as "The Snows of Kilimanjaro" and "The Short Happy Life of Francis Macomber".
The house was built by Asa Tift, a marine architect (and Confederate mariner), in 1851. In 1931 Hemingway purchased it and lived here with his second wife, Pauline, and their two sons until 1939.
Here, Hemingway completed the final draft of "A Farewell to Arms," as well as "The Snows of Kilimanjaro" and "The Short Happy Life of Francis Macomber".