HABILIDADES : (EF15LP01)(EF15LP02) (EF35LP03)(EF35LP04) Diário de Registro de Atividades Escolares Etapa: 4º ano I do Ensino Fundamental Data da Atividade: Componente Curricular: Língua Portuguesa Temática da Aula: Leitura e interpretação de diferentes gêneros textuais Objeto do Conhecimento: Reconstrução das condições de produção e recepção de textos./ Leitura de imagens em narrativas visuais / Compreensão em leitura/ Estratégia […]
O livro começa com a visita escolar a uma fábrica de genes, nas quais se mostra que cada embrião é desenvolvido de modo a se tornar um humano diferente, de acordo com a “casta” pretendi…
Jogo para associação de frases e imagens Jogo para associação de frases e imagens. O aluno joga os dados, lê a frase correspondente e deverá encontrar a imagens que reproduz a frase... Confira: Jogo para associação de frases e imagens Jogo para associação de frases e imagens. O aluno joga os dados, lê a frase correspondente e deverá encontrar a imagens que reproduz a frase... Confira:
quero apresentar fichas de leitura vocabulário verbos. - pode ser usado como consulta no momento da produção de texto. - leitura das pala...
Navegando, a contracorriente, con la lectura (ilustración de Dave Cutler)
Francine Van Nieuwenhove est connue pour ses sujets exclusivement féminins et les attitudes rêveuses de ses personnages. Sa technique graphique et picturale classique est proche de celle des Renais…
Fichas de Leitura sílabas complexas - GE - GI.
If someone was to ask which toy was a favorite in our home, I would be at a loss for words. Besides the basic basket of blocks, Lego's, plastic dishes and baby dolls, we had never purchased any "toys", nor do we own any forms of electronic entertainment (besides a DVD player for a weekend family movie). The most interesting and best part is that boredom was and never is an issue. The truth is, our "toys" were our books! Books were the cause and beginning of everything! They sent our child in search of hidden treasures in the back yard, foraging for medicinal herbs in the garden or engaged them in raising children of their own on the child sized rocker. Books fed the imagination and birthed all the playtime scenarios in our home. "A fondness for reading, properly directed, must be an education in itself." ~ Jane Austen, Excerpt from Mansfield Park This love of books starts in the lap of the reading parent. Besides the special time cuddling on the couch together, books are the tool for presenting the world to your little ones within the safe confines of your cozy home. Here is where they will learn that plants and animals were created by God (science), that certain parts of the world are covered with ice while other areas are full of sand (geography), that children of yesteryear spent most of their time in helping the family survive (history) and most importantly (if carefully chosen), books are also character building. "A truly good book teaches me better than to read it. I must soon lay it down, and commence living on its hint. What I began by reading, I must finish by acting." ~ Henry David Thoreau A home library can be created for pennies. Used books are often for sale at your local library, Goodwill, Salvation Army Stores and yard sales (starting as low as a quarter!). Our family would spend an hour every available Saturday loading up on these gems. Five dollars later we had a box of education and entertainment packed inside hardcover and paperback volumes. How quickly and inexpensively our home library grew! If there are specific titles that you want to purchase, Ebay.com is a wonderful place to find discounted books. Amazon is also wonderful for instant gratification and the free shipping incentive is worthy of attention (here are some of our favorite picture books). The best part about the home library is that you have hand selected (and read) each title and know that everything it contains is safe for those little souls! "Read the best books first, or you may not have a chance to read them at all." ~ Henry David Thoreau You will begin to notice a pattern when you see your child perusing the bookshelves. It all begins with the turning of the pages, a study of the illustrations and attention is paid to every detail they could muster up. Within the next few minutes, you will see they are dressed peculiarly, they are on a mission and about to forge their own trails. Today, they are Sacajawea, Daniel Boone or Paul Revere... What will they be tomorrow? What will they be in the future? That all depends on what your home library encourages... "I am a part of everything that I have read." ~ Theodore Roosevelt "Finally, brethren, whatsoever things are true, whatsoever things are honest, whatsoever things are just, whatsoever things are pure, whatsoever things are lovely, whatsoever things are of good report; if there be any virtue, and if there be any praise, think on these things." ~ Philipians 4:8 "If we encounter a man of rare intellect, we should ask him what books he reads." –Ralph Waldo Emerson This post may be shared with some or all of the following link-ups: The Art of Home-Making Mondays, Modest Mom Monday's, Monday's Musings, Make Your Home Sing Monday, Good Morning Mondays, The Scoop, Titus 2sdays, Titus 2 Tuesdays, Roses of Inspiration, Tuesdays with a Twist, Raising Homemakers, Wise Woman Link Up, Homestead Blog Hop, Wow Us Wednesdays, Wildcrafting Wednesday, Coffee and Conversation, So Much at Home, Homemaking Thursdays, Home Sweet Home, Hearts for Home Thursdays, Home Acre Hop, Growing in Grace Thursdays, From the Farm Blog Hop, Farmgirl Friday, Front Porch Friday Blog Hop, Awesome Life Friday Link Up, Simply Natural Saturdays and Clever Chicks Blog Hop. Thank you lovely ladies for hosting these. The illustrations are all by the talented Ms. Jessie Wilcox Smith.
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En vacaciones, cualquier momento y cualquier lugar es fantástico para leer (ilustración de Lidia Steiner)
Hola Compañer@s! ¿Como están?Les comparto varios sets de dibujos para ordenar secuencias temporales.Los mas pequeños podrán cortar, colorear, ordenar y pegar. AsÃ, de...
Not only are YA books are becoming progressively permeated with sexual, occult or adult themes, but so are recent Caldecott categories for children.
A velha contrabandista _por Saionara C. da Silva e ... - Read more about velhinha, fiscal, saco, lambreta, senhora and areia.
James, Duke of York, later King James II, in the guise of a Roman general, by Henri Gascar, circa 1673. Unknown, no date. "Miss Beaton" (probably Barbara "Baba" Beaton, sister of Cecil Beaton), by George Spencer Watson, circa 1933 or 1934. "Le Petit Chaperon Rouge" (Little Red Riding Hood), by Fleury François Richard, circa 1820. Comte Christophe Urbanowski, by Anton Graff, 1791. Jeanette MacDonald in "The Love Parade", photographer unknown, 1929. "Portrait d'une élégante dame", by Nicolas de Largillière, circa 1700. "Portrait d’un jeune homme", by Joseph Deranton, circa 1790. Advertising for Zotos Welding Gel (?), photographer unknown, 1988. "A Testing Question", by Frederick Morgan, 1892. Interestingly, the mother's gown and coiffure are in the style of the early 1870s. Augusta of Saxe-Gotha-Altenburg, Princess of Wales, the mother of King George III, studio of Allan Ramsay, circa 1760-68. Interior, by Fyodor Petrovich Tolstoy, circa 1830s. Princess Charlotte Bonaparte, by Jean-Pierre Granger, 1808. She was the daughter of Napoléon's brother Joseph. George Wyndham, 3rd Earl of Egremont, in the North Gallery at Petworth, by Thomas Phillips, 1839. Unknown, no date. Alice Crawford in the role of Olivia in "Twelfth Night", by William Logsdail, 1907.
Ormai è nota la mia posizione sui libri e sugli albi “a tema” (per chi volesse approfondire segnalo i seguenti articoli: […]
Between places Reading in bed Reading Light reading Noteworthy Ned Axthelm living in South Berkeley (California), USA more: Ned Axthelm Google pictures Southwest Art
Not only are YA books are becoming progressively permeated with sexual, occult or adult themes, but so are recent Caldecott categories for children.
Explore petrus.agricola's 25747 photos on Flickr!
Die Lesenden, Frau Breyer und Nini (1909). Robert Breyer (German, 1866-1941). Oil on canvas. “There are perhaps no days of our childhood we lived so fully as those we spent with a favorite book.” –...
Reading woman, 1927-28 Reading, 1928 Reading in the open air, 1912 Gyermekek a kertben Olvasa nö, 1906 Róbert Berény born 1887 in Budapest, Hungary died 1953 in Budapest, Hungary more: Wikipedia Hungary art
Edmund Charles Tarbell - "Girl With Sailboat", 1899 – óleo sobre tela – 101,6 x 76,2 cm – coleção particular Edmund Charles Tarbell (26 de abril de 1862 - 01 de agosto de 1938) foi um pintor impressionista americano. Edmund Charles Tarbell - "Reverie - Katharine Finn", 1913 – óleo sobre tela – 127,3 x 86,7 cm - Museum of Fine Arts, Boston, USA Edmund Charles Tarbell - "Girl Sewing in an Orchard", 1892 – óleo sobre tela – 50,8 x 60,9 cm – coleção particular Edmund Charles Tarbell - "Three Sisters", 1890 – óleo sobre tela – 89,2 x 101,9 cm - Milwaukee Art Museum, WS, USA Uma figura de destaque entre os pintores impressionistas de Boston, Tarbell também era um professor muito popular e influente. Tarbell ensinou na escola de Museu de Belas Artes de Boston por mais de 20 anos, onde era tão proeminente que seus alunos passaram a ser conhecidos como Tarbellites. Ele era um membro fundador do grupo Ten American Painters, que inovou se juntando para expor suas obras em ambientes esteticamente coerentes. Além disso, ele foi o primeiro presidente do Sindicato dos Artistas de Boston, um grupo criado para expor e vender obras de artistas norte-americanos vivos. Edmund Charles Tarbell - "The Letter: Josephine at the Family's Island Summer Home" – óleo sobre tela - Martha Washington's Ladies Lounge in the Harry S Truman building of the US Department of State, Washington, DC, USA Edmund Charles Tarbell - "Arrangement in Pink and Grey", 1894 – óleo sobre tela – 113,9 x 11,6 cm - Worcester Art Museum, MA, USA Edmund Charles Tarbell - "Preparing for the Matinee", 1907 – óleo sobre tela – 115,5 x 90,2 cm - Indianapolis Museum of Art, Indiana, USA Tarbell é particularmente associado com o impressionismo figurativo, e suas obras incluem indivíduos (muitas vezes encantadoras mulheres jovens) ao ar livre na luz solar brilhante, assim como cenas interiores de mulheres envolvidas em atividades tranquilas que lembram as obras de Jan Vermeer. O artista nativo de Boston passava os verões em New Castle, New Hampshire, e sua casa lá foi o cenário de muitas de suas obras. Tarbell também foi um pintor de retratos muito procurado, recebendo encomendas para pintar retratados tão distintos como os Presidentes Woodrow Wilson e Herbert Hoover. Edmund Charles Tarbell - "Mother and Child in a Boat, Emeline with Josephine", 1892 – óleo sobre tela – 76,5 x 88,9 cm - Museum of Fine Arts, Boston, USA Edmund Charles Tarbell - "Girl Reading", 1909 – óleo sobre tela – 81,9 x 72,4 cm - Museum of Fine Arts, Boston, USA Edmund Charles Tarbell - "The Blue Veil", 1898 – óleo sobre tela – 73,7 x 61 cm - Fine Arts Museums of San Francisco - de Young, San Francisco, USA Edmund Charles Tarbell - "The Sisters: Josephine and Mary", 1921 – óleo sobre tela – 124,4 x 99 cm - Gibbes Museum of Art, Charleston, South Carolina, USA Aos 26 anos, casou com Emeline Souther, uma estudante de arte e filha de uma família proeminente de Dorchester. Preferindo trabalhar com modelos vivos, Tarbell pintou muitas vezes aqueles imediatamente à mão, como a esposa, os quatro filhos (Josephine, Mercie, Mary e Edmund Arnold Tarbell), e netos. As pinturas ilustram suas vidas. Tarbell se tornou famoso por imagens impressionistas de figuras em paisagens. Edmund Charles Tarbell - "Schooling the Horses, Josephine and Edmund", 1902 – óleo sobre tela – 60,9 x 74,9 cm - Currier Museum of Art - Manchester, NH, USA Edmund Charles Tarbell - "Summer Breeze", 1904 – óleo sobre tela – 76,2 x 63,8 cm - Currier Museum of Art - Manchester, NH, USA Edmund Charles Tarbell - "In the Orchard", 1891 – óleo sobre tela – 154,3 x 166,3 cm - Terra Foundation for American Art, Chicago, USA Sua pintura In the Orchard de 1891 estabeleceu sua reputação como um artista. Ela retrata sua esposa com seus irmãos ao lazer. Edmund Charles Tarbell - "Across the Room", 1899 – óleo sobre tela – 63,5 x 76,5 cm - Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York Primeiro, intitulado "O Vestido Branco" quando exibido em 1899, na segunda exposição anual do grupo Ten American Painters, esta imagem rapidamente se tornou conhecida como “O Outro Lado da Sala”. Tarbell foi fortemente influenciado pelas cenas de interiores de Edgar Degas e pela arte oriental, e usou tais arranjos marcantes de espaço e luz com freqüência. O sofá (modelo Federal) aparece em várias de suas pinturas, e também em uma fotografia do estúdio do artista. A jarra de porcelana chinesa e o biombo japonês também são vistos em várias de suas outras obras. Texto escrito e/ou traduzido e/ou adaptado ©Arteeblog - não copie esse artigo sem autorização desse blog, mas compartilhe usando os ícones de compartilhamento para e-mail ou redes sociais.
Die Leopold Museum-Direktoren Hans-Peter Wipplinger und Gabriele Langer ließen im Rahmen der Pressekonferenz ein aktives und ereignisreiches Jahr 2016 Revue passieren und präsentierten die …
De kans is het grootst dat je nog nooit van Eliza Acton gehoord hebt. Ik heb haar weliswaar af en toe op mijn blog genoemd, maar voor het grote publiek is zij in de vergetelheid geraakt.
Thomas Grant’s life of Jeremy Hutchinson QC shows how, from Profumo to Howard Marks, he loved to skewer hypocrisy and defend rogues
A velha contrabandista _por Saionara C. da Silva e ... - Read more about velhinha, fiscal, saco, lambreta, senhora and areia.
People think I'm ridiculous when I tell them I have certain relationships with books, and that those relationships dictate how I read those books. Why
Un rdv hebdomadaire ...enfin plutôt quand j'ai le temps, mais je ne désespère pas pouvoir y consacrer plus de temps ... petit néologisme de ma composition bien sûr, pas la peine de chercher dans le petit robert ... Puisque j'aime les illustrations, que...
"It is Spring again. The earth is like a child that knows poems."—Rainer Maria Rilke. Book lovers and lovers of spring will enjoy seeing these 17 stunning works of art that celebrate springtime reading.
Bibliomulas (book mules) are mule-borne bookmobiles that transport books to remote villages in Venezuela. The project is by the University of Momboy in
Atividade para o 7º ano, 8º ano, 9º ano ou ensino médio. Você pode baixar esta atividade em PDF no final, pronta para impressão. Leia a char...
Although I live in Santa Monica, where the seasons are usually pretty subtle, we've had some stormy weather that's made me feel cut off from ordinary life. That this coincides with the winter holidays set the focus for this post... The idea of going through mist and fog to a place out of time, a place that changes you, is a compelling theme, familiar in movies such as Brigadoon, Local Hero, and a favorite of mine, given to me by my mom the last winter she was here, "I Know Where I'm Going". It was directed by Michael Powell and Emeric Pressburger in 1945. Wendy Hiller plays Joan Webster, a woman who has always planned carefully, moved forward with determination, and achieved her goals. She is making her way to meet her fiance, a rich industrialist, on a Scottish island in the Hebrides, Kiloran, to get married. The storms detour her along the way. She first arrives in Port Erraig to meet her boat. Here's a still: Above: Waiting for her boat, though everyone has told it won't be coming due to the weather. Above: The itinerary Above: Giving up on the boat for the moment, she goes to a home where she was told she could stay for the night. Above: Warming up before the fire with the other stranded passengers, locals, familiar with the unpredictability of the local weather. Above: The owner of the house, Katrina, is a dog breeder...here she's coming home in the rain. Above: In from the wet weather... Above: The chaos of the weather and the big wet dogs and the wildness of the place will have it's impact. Above: A map of the place she's planning to go. To enjoy the rest of the story you'll need to rent the movie, though you can see it in pieces on YouTube. It's wonderful. Above: Winifred Nicholson painted a great deal on the Scottish Isles. This one is "Boat on a Stormy Sea", 1928-9. Above: Winifred Nicholson, "Isle of Canna", 1951. She may even have seen "I Know Where I'm Going" 6 years earlier. Above: Winifred Nicholson, "View from my Bedroom", 1960s. The light feels as though it's bouncing off snow. Stormy gray seas have always been a dramatic and inspiring subject... Above: John Constable (1776-1837), "Seascape Study with Rain Clouds at Brighton", 1824-8, London, Royal Academy of Arts. Above: Gustave Courbet (1819-1877), "The Water Spout", 1866, Philadelphia Museum of Art. Above: Winslow Homer (1836-1910), "The Gale", 1883-1893, watercolor Above: Caspar David Friedrich (1774-1840), "Monk by the Sea", 1808-1810. Double click to see a larger version as the details are worth looking at. Above: Leon Dabo (1868-1960) "The Seashore", 1900 Above: Joseph Mallord William Turner (1775-1851) "Snow Storm- Steam Boat Off a Harbor's Mouth Above: Joseph Mallord William Turner (1775-1851) "Seascape-Rough Seas, a Squall", 1825 Above: Joseph Mallord William Turner (1775-1851) Above: Mark Rothko "Untitled" 1969. Although this isn't a seascape, there is a strong connection to the Turner painting above. From rough seas to snowy streets... Above: Jean-Édouard Vuillard (1868-1940) Above: James McNeill Whistler (1834-1903), "Nocturne: Grey and Gold-Snow in Chelsea", 1876. Fogg Art Museum, Cambridge, Mass. Above: This room by Karin Draaijer (her house) in Belgium is a place I'd love to walk out of the painting above and come home to. Here in southern California this is what winter means... Above: Our back yard in the pouring rain Above: A stump of wood out back, covered with lichen after a few days of continuous rain. Above: On the Venice canals, (our Venice here at the beach) I took this last December. Above: My husband, Steven, took this photo with a pinhole camera... a lifeguard tower on a stormy day. We often drive to northern California in December...to Big Sur, or Inverness...places with wet moss and tall pines and redwoods, wood burning in cabins, and expanses of ocean. The pictures below are in Big Sur. Above: Deetjen's Big Sur Inn. Hand built in the 1930s by Helmuth Deetjen... the cabins are pretty much unchanged to this day. Deetjen's was built with reclaimed wood from the canneries in Monterey, and the cabins were designed with echoes of his homeland, Norway. This is one of my favorite places to stay. Above: This photo was taken in the Dining Room at Deetjen's (found here). We've enjoyed many meals at that table. Above: Helmuth and Helen Deetjun in front of the main barn they built. Above: An old photo of a corner of the Dining Room at Deetjun's...it doesn't look very different now. Above: I took this picture at Pfeiffer Beach on one of our December visits to Big Sur. Above: Also taken at Pfeiffer Beach, Big Sur. Another favorite destination is Inverness...it's about an hour north of San Francisco. Above: Outside our room at Manka's in Inverness Above: Wooden steps, Inverness Above: The huge fireplace in our room, Inverness. A couple of times when we've been there it's been raining, but I never really want to leave this fireplace or the views beyond anyway. When I do brave the rain this is a place that's wonderful to come back to. Above: Adjacent to Inverness, Point Reyes National Seashore is protected land. At the north end of the peninsula is an old farm...empty now, with the most beautiful group of perfectly simple white buildings. At the end of the day the sunset light glows right through the single rooms inside. Above: Wide expanse of protected beach, Point Reyes National Seashore Above: From A.A. Milnes book "Now We Are Six", illustrated by E. H. Shepard. This was always a favorite image of mine...may have been the seed of my window seat obsession...watching the rain from a warm dry place. Above: Or maybe this picture of a girl sitting on soft cushions, warm in her room with the snow outside is the one. I do try to include window seats in childrens rooms whenever I can. Illustration by Jessie Willcox Smith. Above: Clarence H. White, "Drops of Rain", 1908, from Alfred Stieglitz's Camera Work journal. Dutch painters created scenes that were like movies telling all sorts of stories when you look closely. Above: Pieter Bruegel (1525-69) "Winter Landscape with a Bird Trap", 1565. Looking at this painting and the one below you can really imagine what it would have been like to be skating there. Double click to see some of the details. The ice would have been the meeting place as well as the street. Above: A detail of the bird trap in the painting above it Above: Hendrick Avercamp (1585-1634), "Winter Landscape with Ice Skaters", 1608. I saw this last summer at the Rijksmuseum in Amsterdam. Those skaters may have warmed up in places like this... Above: Pieter de Hooch (1629-1684), "A Woman Peeling Apples", 1663 Above: Van Brekelenkam "The Tailors Workshop"1661 Above: Jan Steen (1626-1679) "Peasants in an Interior",1661 Above: Joachim Beuckelaer (1533-1574) "Making Waffles", 1565 Above: Pieter Janssens Elinga (1623-1682) "Room in a Dutch House", 1670 Above: After not freezing since 1997 the Kinderdijk canal finally froze. This is a photo of the skaters out again last winter. . Above: Hans Brinker, Illustrated by N.C. Wyeth Above: Masao Yamamoto Above: Harry Callahan "Weeds in Snow", 1943 Above: Photo by Todd Hido Above: Photo by Todd Hido Above: Photo by Todd Hido Above: Charles Burchfield (1893-1967) "Tanglewood in Winter", 1917. That was a very critical year for Burchfield, when he felt he did his best work. He went back to the paintings done that year when he needed inspiration, and even used them as a core which he added to by attaching panels around the originals to enlarge them. Above: From the NY Times, photo by Ruby Washington, February 10 2010, taken at the Brooklyn Botanic Garden. This looks like a fantasy world. Above: Claude Monet (1840-1926) "The Road in Front of Saint-Simeon Farm in Winter" Above: Claude Monet (1840-1926) "The Red Kerchief" The following are a collection of paintings of rooms that would be lovely to warm up in after a walk in the snow... Above: Anne Redpath (1895-1965) "The Mantlepiece", 1947. Above: Anne Redpath (1895-1965) "Figure at a Table" 1948-9 Above: Carl Larsson (1853-1919) "Martina by the Fire", 1908 Above: Duncan Grant (1885-1978) "The Stove, Fitzroy Square", 1936. This is Duncan Grant's daughter Angelica reading by The stove in his studio. Duncan Grant was one of the central members of the Bloomsbury group. Above: Pierre Bonnard (1867-1947) "Work Table", 1926/1937. This painting was in a show I saw at the Metropolitan Museum in the spring of 2009 of Bonnard's late still lifes and interiors. It was really a pleasure to look at this one closely. Above: Edgar Degas (1834-1917) "Interior with a Young Girl Writing", 1905 Above: Vanessa Bell (1879-1961), "Conversation Piece", 1912. She was at the heart of the Bloomsbury group, and designed for Omega Workshops making decorative objects and fabrics. Her sister was Virginia Woolf. Above: Vanessa Bell (1879-1961) "Interior with the Artist's Daughter", 1935-6 And one photo... Above: Attic Bedroom from World of Interiors Above: Wiveton Hall, in Norfolk, where we were fortunate enough to stay for a few days one very cold and wet spring many years ago, as we knew the owner, Desmond MacCarthy. Above: At Wiveton Hall we made pigeon for dinner, with root vegetables dug from the garden, and ate it almost inside the huge fireplace on the right. Our friend was named for his grandfather, also Desmond MacCarthy, a literary and drama critic, who was a member of the Bloomsbury group. William Steig's book, "Brave Irene", is a terrific book about the daughter of a dressmaker who insists on taking the dress her mother has made to the duchess, as her mother is sick and needs to stay in bed. Irene is determined, loyal, persevering, and brave, as she trudges through the snowstorm to reach the duchess. Above: The wind snatches the box from her hands Above: After trudging through wind and snow till it's dark, the light from the duchesses mansion is finally visible! Above: Welcomed inside, Irene is given a good meal and a place before the fire Above: And, a ride home the next morning! Snow in the city.... Above: Alfred Stieglitz (1864-1946) "Snapshot-From My Window, New York", 1907 Above: Gustave Caillebotte (1848-1894)"Rooftops Under Snow" Above: William James Glackens (1870-1938) "Washington Square Winter" 1910 Above: Taken by my son, at the Fens, in Boston, white with this years first snow. Above: Alfred Stieglitz (1864-1946) "The Street-Design for a Poster", 1903 Above: Robert Henri (1865-1929) "Snow in New York", 1902 Above: From the NY Times, by photographer Steve Berman, January 9th 1996 . Above: Childe Hassam (1859-1935) "Street Scene, Christmas Morning", 1892 Inside those snow covered apartment houses warm fires and golden light... Above: Edward Everett Horton and Jean Dixon from the George Cukor movie "Holiday" Above: Walter Gay "Elsie de Wolfe's Drawing Room" Above: Saul Leiter "Canopy", 1958 Above: Saul Leiter "Newspaper Kiosk", 1955 Above: Saul Leiter "Red Umbrella", 1957 Above: Saul Leiter "Snow", 1960 And last of all, Domino and the fire keeping us warm here at home... HAPPY 2011 EVERYONE!!!
Alexei Alexeievich Harlamoff (A.K.A Alexej Harlamoff - Alexej Charlamoff) Алексей Алексеевич Харламов (1840–1925) was born at Saratov, Russia in 1840. He studied at the Academy of Fine Arts in St. Petersburg and won a gold medal and a travel scholarship in 1868 for his painting The Return of the Prodigal Son.
Reading can take you places.