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Dealers are similarly free to sell whatever art goes up in Venice, and collectors who pay attention will spot similar works by some of the same artists on offer at Art Basel in a few weeks.
WSJ: The Venice Biennale: Venetian Finds
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The hiatus may be understandable but not for patients desperate for state-of-the art medicines, whatever their cost.
ECONOMIST: New drugs
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Such works of art are mere excrescences of whatever the latest trend may happen to be.
WSJ: Long After the Initial Shock, Modernism Still Delivers | Sightings by Terry Teachout
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Actually I rather, I have a - how can I put it - a grudging admiration for Ivan's stand with the ICA. Whatever you think of his views on representative art and so on, he was very gutsy in doing that.
BBC: News | BREAKFAST WITH FROST | David Davis on Breakfast with Frost
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Whatever else Mr Avedon thought about photography, an art about which he was unceasingly articulate and philosophical, he did not want it to be kind.
ECONOMIST: Obituary
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"One could get away with more on the summer Riviera, and whatever happened seemed to have something to do with art, " Fitzgerald wrote to his editor, Maxwell Perkins.
WSJ: The Roaring Riviera: A Guide to Scott and Zelda Fitzgerald's C?te d'Azur
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Whatever we did not buy he would hang at the next art show.
FORBES: Art and the Economics of Production to Order, for Inventory, or Something In Between
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It seems to be a lost art for some, and it makes for great TV (whatever that is).
FORBES: Are You Working With An Office Terror?
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Call it kitsch, call it whatever you like, but I think this attire is superb, spontaneous, pure art.
BBC: Sexy secrets of the Syrian souk
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The upscale Art Deco space draws stylish locals to check out the crowd and sample whatever is fresh on the big raw bar.
BBC: Business trip: New York City
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But whatever the contradictions of a life designed to provoke and dazzle, Philip Johnson ceaselessly promoted architecture as the art that has shaped the great monuments and cities of history, and he sincerely believed that we owe the future a legacy of equal value.
WSJ: Philip Johnson: Short of Attention Span, Long on Aesthetics