Auguste Louis Lepère was born in Paris (1849), the son of the
sculptor François Lepère. Auguste Lepère was taught wood engraving by the
English wood engraver Burn Smeeton, to whom he was apprenticed at the age of
13. It was Félix Bracquemond who in 1889 encouraged him to take up etching;
Lepère's first 11 etchings were exhibited the following year at the Salon de la
Société Nationale des Beaux-Arts. Lepère took a purist's approach to etching,
believing that an etcher should be able to achieve his effects entirely through
the etching needle; he rarely used aquatint.
Monday, October 31, 2016
Sunday, October 30, 2016
Guy Chapouillié aka Monsieur Béret
Guy Chapouillié was born in 1942 in Casteljaloux (Gascogne)
where the love for both rugby and the cinema was kindled at an early age.
After high school he studied agriculture and specialized at
the National School of Dairy Industry in Aurillac, after which he entered the Conservatoire Libre du Cinéma in Paris.
He became the founder of the Higher Audiovisual School at
the University of Toulouse in 1979 and was director until 2010.
He wrote several books, the latest being about Marcel
Pagnol, an inventor of filmmaking. He is currently Professor Emeritus and filmmaker.
More interesting for us, however, is Guy Chapouillié's nickname Monsieur Béret. He is the man behind Les films du béret.
Saturday, October 29, 2016
Dudley Sutton (Tinker Dill)
Dudley Sutton (1933) is an English actor. Dudley was
educated at boarding school in Lifton in Devon. He served in the RAF as a
mechanic before enrolling in the Royal Academy of Dramatic Art, (RADA) from
which he was later expelled for responding to rock and roll.
He became known after playing a gay biker in The Leather Boys (1964), a role which
showed his potential for eccentric screen personae. On stage, he played the
title role in the first production of Joe Orton's Entertaining Mr Sloane (1963).
Sutton has appeared in many films during his career,
including Rotten to the Core (1965), The Pink Panther Strikes Again (1976),
Fellini's Casanova (1976), Edward II (1991), and The Football Factory (2004).
Among his many television appearances are his roles as
Tinker Dill in Lovejoy (1986 & 1991 - 94) – whose friendship with Lovejoy
and expertise in the antique trade was the backbone of the show.
In 2003, Sutton found inspiration from the Internet
"where apparently people say that every time you masturbate God kills a
kitten". From that statement, Sutton developed a comic piece about "a
young man's emotions and feelings, from the moment he's a baby tugging at his
cock onwards."
Friday, October 28, 2016
Fred Koller
Fred Koller (born March 5, 1950 in Chicago, Illinois) is an
American singer-songwriter. He has been active in the music business since
1973. Fred currently lives and works in Nashville with his wife Trish and their
cat Buddy.
Koller has written over 300 songs which have been recorded.
He was awarded the BMI Millionaire Performance Award for both Angel Eyes and
She Came From Fort Worth. Koller also won BMI Awards for This Dream's On Me,
Goin' Gone, Life As We Knew It and Will It Be Love By Morning.
He is the former
Vice President of The Nashville Songwriters Association International. Koller
has taught for Songwriters Guild of America and was a staff instructor for both
the Kerrville Folk Festival and the Augusta Heritage Festival.
Thursday, October 27, 2016
Jean de la Fontaine
From wrongs of wicked men we draw
Excuses for our own:--
Such is the universal law.
Would you have mercy shown,
Let yours be clearly known.
Excuses for our own:--
Such is the universal law.
Would you have mercy shown,
Let yours be clearly known.
A fowler's mirror served to snare
The little tenants of the air.
A lark there saw her pretty face,
And was approaching to the place.
A hawk, that sailed on high
Like vapour in the sky,
Came down, as still as infant's breath,
On her who sang so near her death.
She thus escaped the fowler's steel,
The hawk's malignant claws to feel.
While in his cruel way,
The pirate pluck'd his prey,
Upon himself the net was sprung.
'O fowler,' pray'd he in the hawkish tongue,
'Release me in thy clemency!
I never did a wrong to thee.'
The man replied, ''Tis true;
And did the lark to you?'
The little tenants of the air.
A lark there saw her pretty face,
And was approaching to the place.
A hawk, that sailed on high
Like vapour in the sky,
Came down, as still as infant's breath,
On her who sang so near her death.
She thus escaped the fowler's steel,
The hawk's malignant claws to feel.
While in his cruel way,
The pirate pluck'd his prey,
Upon himself the net was sprung.
'O fowler,' pray'd he in the hawkish tongue,
'Release me in thy clemency!
I never did a wrong to thee.'
The man replied, ''Tis true;
And did the lark to you?'
Wednesday, October 26, 2016
The Big Sleep
The Big Sleep is a 1946 film
noir directed by Howard Hawks, the first film version of Raymond Chandler's
1939 novel of the same name.
The movie stars Humphrey Bogart as private detective Philip
Marlowe and Lauren Bacall as Vivian Rutledge in a story about the "process
of a criminal investigation, not its results."
The Big Sleep is known for its convoluted plot. During
filming, allegedly neither the director nor the screenwriters knew whether
chauffeur Owen Taylor was murdered or had killed himself. They sent a cable to
Chandler, who told a friend in a later letter: "They sent me a wire ...
asking me, and dammit I didn't know either".
In 1997, the U.S. Library of Congress deemed the film
"culturally, historically, or aesthetically significant," and added
it to the National Film Registry.
Tuesday, October 25, 2016
Serge Gainsbourg and Lovers
Serge Gainsbourg (born Lucien Ginsburg; 1928 –1991) was a
French singer, songwriter, pianist, film composer, poet, painter, screenwriter,
writer, actor, and director.
Regarded as one of the most important figures in French
popular music, he was renowned for his often provocative and scandalous
releases, as well as his diverse artistic output, which embodied genres ranging
from jazz, mambo, world, chanson, pop and yé-yé, to rock and roll, progressive
rock, reggae, electronic, disco, new wave, and funk. Gainsbourg's varied
musical style and individuality make him difficult to categorize although his
legacy has been firmly established and he is often regarded as one of the
world's most influential popular musicians.
His lyrical work incorporated a vast amount of clever word
play to hoodwink the listener, often for humorous, provocative, satirical or
subversive reasons. Through the course of his career, Gainsbourg wrote over 550
songs, which have been covered more than a thousand times by a wide range of
artists.
Since his death, Gainsbourg's music has reached legendary
stature in France. He has also gained a cult following in the English-speaking
world, with numerous artists influenced by his arrangements.
Interestingly, not only himself, but also former partners Brigitte
Bardot and Jane Birkin are avid boineras.
Monday, October 24, 2016
The Caudillo at Boinas Elósegui
I found the photographs below on an auction site; not the kind of photos I like to associate with one of my favourite beret manufacturers, but at the same time, who knows what the people at Boinas Elósegui really thought of the visit of Generalissimo Franco to their factory at the time...
Sunday, October 23, 2016
José Arrue
José Arrue y Valle, usually known as José Arrue (1885 –1977)
was a Basque Spanish painter.
Arrue came from an artistic family: his father, Lucas Arrue,
was an art collector, and his three brothers, Alberto, Ramiro, and Ricardo,
were also painters. After early studies in Bilbao, he subsequently continued
his training in Barcelona, Paris and Milan. He was one of the founders of the
weekly El Coitao, and the Association of Basque Artists.
Arrue's love of bullfighting led to his debut in the bullring
on October 17, 1909, in Bilbao. According to several authorities, Arrue proved
to be a capable matador. Arrue's painting won several awards during his
lifetime. He also designed bullfighting posters, did advertising work, and
published cartoons in newspapers such as El Sol and El Liberal, and the Buenos
Aires newspaper La Razón; an exhibition of his paintings was staged in Buenos
Aires in 1928, later travelling to Montevideo, Uruguay.
During the Spanish Civil War, Arrue drew comics describing events
from the perspective of the Basque Government. After the collapse of the Republican Army of
the North, and the fall of Santander on September 1, 1937, Arrue was arrested
in the city. He was held in Nationalist captivity for two years, during which
time he was moved to Orduña prison. He was eventually released in 1940 and went
to live in Llodio with his family. Although in semi-retirement from public
life, he participated in a number of further exhibitions: a retrospective of
his work was held in 1973, and a further one, featuring the work of all of the
Arrue brothers, was held in Bilbao in 1977.
Arrue's work is noted for its concrete realism, clear lines
and composition, and its focus on Basque subjects, particularly the landscape
of the Basque country, its religious festivals, romerias and social rituals,
and the lives of its peasantry.
Saturday, October 22, 2016
An Unexpected Treasure
Friday, October 21, 2016
Aurelio Arteta
Aurelio Arteta (1879–1940) was a Spanish painter born in
Bilbao. He studied at the Real Academia de Bellas Artes de San Fernando in
Madrid.
In 1905 and 1906 he travelled to Paris and in Italy, thanks to a grant
from the Diputación Foral de Vizcaya. There he was influenced both by
Impressionist painting and by the work of Italian Renaissance masters.
In 1911,
along with other artists, he founded the Asociación de Artistas Vascos. In 1930
he was awarded the National Prize for Painting.
After the Spanish Civil War he went into exile, first in
France and subsequently in Mexico, where he died in a tram accident.
His painting, somewhat idealized, though melancholic,
concentrated on Basque themes, showing both rural scenes and the way that
society was changed by industrialization, with townscapes along the river
Nervión. His greatest work is the fresco in the vestibule of the Banco de
Bilbao, in Madrid.
Thursday, October 20, 2016
Clarence "The Big Man" Clemons
Clarence Anicholas Clemons, Jr. (1942 –2011),
also known as The Big Man, was an American saxophonist, musician and actor. He
was reported to be 6' 5" (195.5 cm) tall. From 1972 until his death, he
was a prominent member of Bruce Springsteen's E Street Band, playing the tenor
saxophone.
He released several solo albums and in 1985,
had a hit single with "You're a Friend of Mine," a duet with Jackson
Browne. As a guest musician he also featured on Aretha Franklin's classic
"Freeway of Love" and on Twisted Sister's "Be Chrool to Your
Scuel" as well as performing in concert with the Grateful Dead and Ringo
Starr & His All-Starr Band. As an actor Clemons featured in several films,
including New York, New York and Bill
& Ted's Excellent Adventure.
He also made cameo appearances in several TV
series, including Diff'rent Strokes, Nash Bridges, The Simpsons and The Wire.
Together with his television writer friend Don Reo he published his
semi-fictional autobiography told in third person, Big Man: Real Life & Tall Tales, in 2009. Clemons suffered a
stroke on June 12, 2011, and died of complications from it on June 18. Three
years following his death, Clemons, along with the rest of the E Street Band,
was posthumously inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame.
Standard Flying 12 Saloon
For those visitors of The Beret project who believe I am [only] Francophile and write about French cars: the Standard Motor Company Limited was a motor vehicle
manufacturer, founded in Coventry, England.
It purchased Triumph in 1945 and in 1959 officially changed its name to Standard-Triumph International and began to put the Triumph brandname on all its products.
It purchased Triumph in 1945 and in 1959 officially changed its name to Standard-Triumph International and began to put the Triumph brandname on all its products.
For many years it manufactured Ferguson tractors powered by
its Vanguard engine. All Standard's tractor assets were sold to Massey-Ferguson
as of 31 August 1959.
As of 28 September 1959 Standard Motor Company was re-named
Standard-Triumph International Limited. A new subsidiary took the name The
Standard Motor Company Limited and took over the manufacture of the group's
products.
The Standard name was last used in Britain in 1963, and in
India in 1987.
Wednesday, October 19, 2016
Antonio Guzmán Capel
Antonio Guzmán Capel (1960) is a Spanish painter. Since 1961
he has resided in the city of Palencia, Spain.
A self-taught artist, from childhood he showed an innate
quality for drawing and painting. He made his first exhibition when he was only
eleven years old, followed by a yearly exhibition every year. At fourteen years
of age, he exhibited his work in Switzerland, where he was regarded by local
critics as a genius of painting, because there was no known artist at that time
with the ability to perform works such as his, at such an early age.
Tuesday, October 18, 2016
Portraits of Brigadistas during the Spanish Civil War
A fine Spanish photo library has all these portraits of Brigadistas who fought in the International Brigades during the Spanish Civil War. Only their surname was listed, no further information as to date and location.
RobinsonBrown
Chaquin
Dallet
Diaz
Ruger
Monday, October 17, 2016
Joaquín Agrasot y Juan
Joaquín Agrasot y Juan (1836 - 1919) was a Spanish painter
of the Realistic style who produced many works in the Costumbrismo genre.
Although he largely devoted himself to Costumbrismo
paintings, which were often criticized as being too commercial, his paintings
on historical subjects were very popular.
In 1884, the Spanish government
bought his painting "The Death of the Marqués del Duero" for display
in the Senate.