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VISION QUEST| Huntington exhibits unique collection of Edward Weston photographs made during his journey across California and the Southwest during the Great Depression
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STAFF WRITER
"In March 1937, when I read the list of newly appointed Guggenheim
Fellows, I rejoiced, first that there was a photographer among them,
second that the photographer was Edward Weston," wrote Charis Wilson
in the January 1941 edition of California Arts and Architecture. "I
haven't seen a write-up of Weston since that failed to mention that
he was the first photographer to receive this accolade. But to me,
far more interesting than the mere statistical fact, is what he did
with it."
More than any other person, Wilson was in a unique position to
make that observation. Since 1934 she ...
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Holding office in a world of change
Newspaper article from: The Northern Echo
; ...with Rome.Wolsey's successor, Cuthbert Tunstall, was also Catholic. He became...the onset of an age of reform.Tunstall had been Bishop of London but was...a man of Protestant leanings, Tunstall remained on the fence as the religious...
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The Last Office: 1539 and the Dissolution of a Monastery.(Book review)
Magazine article from: History Today
; ...eyewitness account of the desecration of St Cuthbert's shrine, and the exhumation of Cuthbert's incorrupt corpse. The curious thing...the instinct for survival shown by bishop Cuthbert Tunstall and prior Hugh Whitehead, Moorhouse states...
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A tale of religious upheaval
Newspaper article from: The Boston Globe
; ...rebellion with its richly ornamented banner of St. Cuthbert being taken by the rebel army to flaunt at the King...possessed "a powerful instinct for survival." Cuthbert Tunstall, the prince-bishop, was not only "a national...
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Classic Thoughts: Tush, ye shall not die
Newspaper article from: The Independent - London
; ...learning, Tyndale was naive. He set off for London to persuade the bishop, Cuthbert Tunstall, to support him in his plan to translate the Bible into English. Tunstall was not keen on giving up his monopoly of Holy Writ, in Latin. So in 1524...
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Echo Memories - Castle 'in the shadow' that was nearly lost forever
Newspaper article from: The Northern Echo
; ...site about 1000AD, shortly after the carriers of St Cuthbert's coffin arrived in 995AD. Durham successfully...Hatfield (1345-1381), Richard Fox (14941501) and Cuthbert Tunstall (1530-1559) built many significant parts of the...
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C. Paul Christianson. The Riverside Gardens of Thomas More's London.(Book review)
Magazine article from: Utopian Studies
; ...Henry VIII, Anne Boleyn, Cardinal Wolsey, William Tyndale, and More's family and friends, including Erasmus, Cuthbert Tunstall, and Peter Giles. A chapter on the London gardeners is supported by four appendices listing royal gardeners under...
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More vividly
Newspaper article from: Scotland on Sunday
; ...informed his legal career, we get very little about his brilliant contemporaries, Thomas Linacre, John Colet, Cuthbert Tunstall and William Grocyn, who established an intellectual network across Europe. Ackroyd is very good on More's relationship...
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Historical Prints of English Divines
Magazine article from: Anglican and Episcopal History
; ...hymnographer, author of'Rock of Ages,' 1740-1778 (1) Richard Trevor, Bishop of Durham, 1707-1771 (1) Cuthbert Tunstall, Bishop of Durham, 1474-1559 (1) William Tyndale, Bible translator and reformation theologian, 1494-1536...
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Durham Cathedral recovers missing religious books.(medieval Bible restored)(Brief Article)
Newspaper article from: M2 Best Books
; ...14th century monks, and a text printed in Paris in 1512 which contains the works of St Cyprian and once belonged to Cuthbert Tunstall, Bishop of Durham, The Guardian reported. Both texts were purchased with the aid of the Museums, Libraries and...
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Dangerous Reading In Its Day; Doomed Translator, Ill-Fated Queen Had in Common a Devotion to the English Bible
Newspaper article from: The Washington Post
; ...the Rhine and smuggled into ports in the south of England. Many were collected by order of the bishop of London, Cuthbert Tunstall, and burned in front of St. Paul's Cathedral. The remainder made their way into parishes throughout England...
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