Yahoo Search Búsqueda en la Web

Resultado de búsqueda

  1. Generación pop de Liverpool: Adrián Henri. Presentamos, en versión de José Vicente Anaya, un poema de Adrian Henri. Formó parte del trío de poetas (con Roger McGouh y Brian Patten) que en la década de 1960 se hacían llamar Rock-y-Poesía, o la Escena de Liverpool, también fueron conocidos como la Generación Pop de Liverpool. Adrian ...

  2. 1 Adrian Henri – Total Art, Exhibition Research Centre, School of Art and Design, Liverpool, John Moo ; 2 The exhibition Total Art was part of the 2014 Liverpool Art Biennial1.It focused on “the long Sixties,” when Henri’s work was at its most radical, irreverent, innovative and collaborative. The show included paintings, collages, prints, annotated scripts, artefacts and ephemera ...

  3. Photographic credits include. Alex Brattel, Simon Burns, Brian Duff, Hussey, Robin Allison-Smith, Don McCullin, Richard Lake, Liverpool Daily Post and Echo, *Williams, Eve Goldsmith, Susan Sterne, Linda Bussey, Beatrice Bastiani, Philip Jones Griffiths, Edward Lucie-Smith, Peter Everard Smith, Robin Constable

  4. 22 de dic. de 2000 · Liverpool poet Adrian Henri dies. By Matt Born 22 December 2000 • 12:00am . ... "Adrian played many roles as poet and artist, but when the dust settles, people will remember what a great man he ...

  5. But the Adrian Henri who, a few years later, turned the musical chug of Mersey Beat into a semi-psychedelic urban surrealism, who painted realities and fantasies of Liverpool 8 and who helped blow open the closed doors of British poetry, seemed steeped in the city. With his fellow ‘Liverpool Poets’ – Roger McGough and Brian Patten ...

  6. Adrian Henri (1932–2000) Painter, poet, performance artist, teacher and writer, born in Birkenhead, Cheshire, where he remained based. He was closely identified with the 1960s Liverpool Pop scene and sought to produce popularly understandable art, as with Kop football series from the 1970s. He studied under Lawrence Gowing and Roger de Grey ...

  7. This chapter examines on the poetry of Adrian Henri, which is, more than that of Roger McGough or Brian Patten, particularly redolent of Liverpool. Henri's poems are mostly love poems, autobiographical snippets, and collages full of bright and dark sensual detail; others are wry little observations and wordplays, often a bit funny, often poignant.