#PEret
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edgarmoser · 1 year ago
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peret - borriquito...
1971
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myeurovisionsongcontest · 6 months ago
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12endigital · 1 year ago
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El Kiosco Peret cierra sus puertas después de más de un siglo por una deuda de 130.000€
La Junta de Gobierno del Ayuntamiento de Alicante ya ha iniciado el procedimiento para rescindir el contrato de la concesión para la explotación de la heladería de la Explanada, en manos del Kiosco Peret desde hace más de un siglo. El ejecutivo también ha dado luz verde a la incautación de la garantía de 30.000 euros que la empresa había depositado para obtener la concesión. El Ayuntamiento dará…
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originalamusedmuse · 1 year ago
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The first novel in my series about Antonin Artaud and Robert Desnos is published! Available at all major bookstores in paperback, Kindle and Nook!
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lplobinske · 2 years ago
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The importance of being seen
The importance of being seen
Or, what I learned at church today. I wasn’t sure what to pick today, so I went with this. LOL. I went to UU services today. The service touched on a sampling of the variety of holidays we all celebrate this month: Solstice, Hanukkah, Christmas, Kwanzaa. We had a Solstice story and hymn, a Hanukkah meditation and hymn, an Advent homily, and a Kwanzaa video. It was very nice to get this sampling…
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espeonseal · 2 months ago
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weird obscure PSX/Old PC games with cult followings
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some more rpg horror guys since you've all been so kind
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pyotrkochetkov · 10 months ago
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andrei loves his goalies | january 15, 2024
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mioritic · 1 year ago
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Yiddish writers, Warsaw, 1922
From left to right, with short biographies:
Esther (Esye) Elkin (?–?) was the wife of Mendl Elkin.
Mendl Elkin (1874–1962) was born to a family of Jewish farmers in Belarus. Though working as a dentist for six years, he was more interested in arts and culture, and would spend his spare time writing for socialist newspapers and acting in an amateur Russian-Yiddish theatre group. He spent the 1910s–1920s between Bobruisk and Siberia before moving to Vilna and founding a theatre group, as well as editing literary journals and writing poetry. He would later move to New York, where he served as Chief Librarian for YIVO.
Peretz Hirschbein (1880–1948) was born near Grodno; his father operated a water mill. He studied at a yeshiva before becoming a Hebrew teacher. In his 20s he began to write poetry and plays in both Hebrew and Yiddish, and would soon move to Odessa to stage his plays. After his theatre troupe disbanded in 1910, he spent the remainder of his life travelling, finally moving with his wife Esther Shumiatcher to Los Angeles.
Uri Zvi Grinberg (1896–1981) was a Yiddish writer before moving into Hebrew. Born into a Hasidic family in what is today Ukraine, he served in the Austro-Hungarian army. Radicalized by the November 1918 pogrom in Lwów, he spent the interwar period between Palestine and Europe. He co-founded the self-proclaimed fascist group Brit HaBirionim and later served as a Member of Knesset for Herut. He was awarded the Bialik Prize three times, as well as the Israel Prize for his contributions to literature.
Khane Kacyzne (?–?) was the wife of Alter Kacyzne. Together they had a daughter, Shulamith, who survived the Holocaust by hiding as a non-Jew. Khane was murdered at Bełżec.
Alter Kacyzne (1885–1941) was a prolific photographer and writer, born to a bricklayer and a seamstress in Vilna. He took up photography early, at age 14, by which point he had also taught himself Hebrew, Polish, German, Russian, and French (alongside his native Yiddish) and had begun to write poetry. Through the interwar period he worked as a photojournalist, travelling extensively, as well as serving as editor for several literary magazines and writing for communist newspapers. He was beaten to death by Ukrainian fascists in 1941, and his wife Khane was murdered at Bełżec extermination camp.
Esther Shumiatcher (1896–1985) was born in Grodno, though her family emigrated to Alberta, Canada in 1911. Interested in poetry and screenwriting, she worked several jobs to make money: as a waitress, in a meat-packing plant, and helping her family run a boarding house out of their home. In the 1920s she went to Warsaw and worked extensively as a poet; her poem "Albatros" gave its name to a modernist Yiddish journal. She was married to Peretz Hirschbein, whom she met while he was taken ill in Calgary and nursed back to health in her family's home. After her husband's death in 1948, she moved to New York.
From the YIVO Archives.
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the-cricket-chirps · 6 months ago
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Valentine Hugo
Portraits of Paul Eluard, André Breton, Tristan Tzara, René Char, Benjamin Péret, René Crevel
1932
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eyeoftheheart · 6 months ago
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Surrealist poets Andre Breton, Paul Eluard, Tristan Tzara, and Benjamin Peret signed this photograph, taken in 1932. | Located in: Bibliotheque d'Art et d'Archeologie, Fondation Jacques Doucet, Paris, France.
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ozkar-krapo · 2 months ago
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V/A
"Tellus #20 : Media Myth"
(cassette. Tellus. 1988) [US]
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myeurovisionsongcontest · 6 months ago
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themancorialist · 2 years ago
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Piccadilly Gardens, Manchester.
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stereax · 10 months ago
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surrealistnyc · 2 months ago
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Infosurr #167 is out now:
Issue 167 starts with the discovery of Bastian van der Velden’s original research on the context of the relationships between Breton and Nadja – he is the « archeologist of images and ancient texts hidden in archives » – and that of Leonor de Abreu on Benjamin Péret in Mexico. News are given of what is happening on the Canadian West Coast, with Ron Sakolsky’s Surrealism and the Anarchist Imagination, as well as twenty years of The Oystercatcher – systematically published every May 1st – with surrealism as its field of investigation. « Surrealism is never what it seems ».
Homage is paid to Claude Tarnaud’s Maga, illustrated by Henriette de Champrel,  » offering suspended forms between jelly fish and madrepores » – one of these images is on the first page, to Alain Roussel and his Impossible Text : « To read this fine flower is an immense pleasure, this is what Jehan Mayoux, who knew flowers so well, would have appreciated ». The issue will close on Max Ernst’s Imaginary Worlds – Liberated Worlds.
Various articles will include our « regrets »: on the surrealists’ colonial « unframing » and on forgotten departures in 2018 and 2019.. There will be four pages of references to documents and exhibitions.
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pensfan4lfe2 · 1 month ago
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Then&Now || Yaniv Perets
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