Showing 41 - 60 results of 270 for search '"Van Gogh"', query time: 0.12s Refine Results
  1. 41

    Tecendo diálogos: Han Kang, Van Gogh e Henri Meschonnic by Maria Sílvia Cintra Martins

    Published 2021-02-01
    “…Aspectos teóricos da proposta da Antropologia da Linguagem, do linguista, poeta e tradutor francês Henri Meschonnic, são colocados em diálogo, primeiro com a obra Leçons de Grec (Kang 2019); em seguida com trecho da carta 179 de Van Gogh (Van Gogh Museum 2009). Obtenho, dessa forma, certos esclarecimentos a respeito da proposta literária da escritora coreana Han Kang; de eventual projeto de tradução para a carta 179 do pintor holandês Vincent Van Gogh, a qual ainda não possui tradução para a língua portuguesa; também, de aspectos ainda não muito bem compreendidos e difundidos da obra de Henri Meschonnic. …”
    Get full text
    Article
  2. 42
  3. 43
  4. 44
  5. 45

    The Influence of Vincent Van Gogh’s Religious Background on His Works in the Nuenen Period by MONTHER SAMEH AL-ATOUM

    Published 2021-02-01
    “… The current study aims to identify the impact of Vincent Van Gogh’s religious life on his works of art during his stay in Nuenen, and the mechanism of his employment in selecting the works of that period, using the analytical descriptive approach to interpret and analyze this stage. …”
    Get full text
    Article
  6. 46

    The Influence of Vincent Van Gogh’s Religious Background on His Works in the Nuenen Period by MONTHER SAMEH AL-ATOUM

    Published 2021-02-01
    “… The current study aims to identify the impact of Vincent Van Gogh’s religious life on his works of art during his stay in Nuenen, and the mechanism of his employment in selecting the works of that period, using the analytical descriptive approach to interpret and analyze this stage. …”
    Get full text
    Article
  7. 47
  8. 48

    Lust for life (1956) by Vincente Minelli. Vincent Van Gogh´s dual pathology by Miguel ABAD VILA

    Published 2020-10-01
    “…<p>Various theories have tried to explain the symptons suffered by the painter Vincent Willem van Gogh (Zundert, 3º de marzo de 1853 – Auvers-sur-Oise, 29 de julio de 1890), one of the greatest exponents of post-impresionism. …”
    Get full text
    Article
  9. 49

    Looking at paintings in the Vincent Van Gogh Museum: Eye movement patterns of children and adults. by Francesco Walker, Berno Bucker, Nicola C Anderson, Daniel Schreij, Jan Theeuwes

    Published 2017-01-01
    “…In the present study, we examined the eye movement behaviour of children and adults looking at five Van Gogh paintings in the Van Gogh Museum, Amsterdam. …”
    Get full text
    Article
  10. 50

    Brueghel, Van Gogh, and Chirico: Inter-Animation of Painting and Writing in Some Ekphrastic Poems by Sadia Binte Kausar

    Published 2023-12-01
    “…It investigates three sets of poems that re-imagine Pieter Breughel’s Landscape with the Fall of Icarus and Vincent van Gogh’s The Starry Night. This article also addresses some poems based on Giorgio de Chirico’s Conversation among the Ruins and demonstrates how Sylvia Plath’s eponymous poem subverts the male gaze accentuated in Chirico’s painting. …”
    Get full text
    Article
  11. 51

    El Artista y la Enfermedad by Hernán Urbina Joiro

    Published 2011-07-01
    Subjects: “…humanismo,ciencia,arte,Van Gogh…”
    Get full text
    Article
  12. 52
  13. 53
  14. 54
  15. 55
  16. 56
  17. 57
  18. 58
  19. 59

    Genetic analysis of floral symmetry in Van Gogh's sunflowers reveals independent recruitment of CYCLOIDEA genes in the Asteraceae. by Mark A Chapman, Shunxue Tang, Dörthe Draeger, Savithri Nambeesan, Hunter Shaffer, Jessica G Barb, Steven J Knapp, John M Burke

    Published 2012-01-01
    “…We show that in double-flowered (dbl) sunflower mutants (in which disc florets develop bilateral symmetry), such as those captured by Vincent van Gogh in his famous nineteenth-century sunflower paintings, an insertion into the promoter region of a CYCLOIDEA (CYC)-like gene (HaCYC2c) that is normally expressed specifically in WT rays is instead expressed throughout the inflorescence, presumably resulting in the observed loss of actinomorphy. …”
    Get full text
    Article
  20. 60