談Minoru Betsuyaku (別役 実)的荒謬劇場:Factory Town、慈善名家Sackler 家族的故(含阿片(Opioid)類藥物泛濫成災)......事等等;他的『名画劇場』 (1985) 6篇 (收入柏谷譯《三美神:日本極短篇小說選》1992。畫的欣賞方式,The Three Graces
https://www.facebook.com/hanching.chung/videos/1461213924338300
Factory Town https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=YR-xI-51YBc
British Museum to Remove Sackler Name From Its Walls
The decision comes just months after the Metropolitan Museum of Art said it would remove the family’s name from seven exhibition spaces.
**別役實(日語:別役 実/べつやく みのる Betsuyaku Minoru */?,1937年4月6日-2020年3月3日),日本劇作家,兒童文學作家。是日本荒誕派戲劇奠基人。
別役實的早期戲劇作品受卡夫卡、貝克特和尤內斯庫等作家的影響,並將這種荒誕派戲劇風格帶入當代日本,被譽為日本荒誕派戲劇奠基人。他的作品極度荒謬卻異常真實[6],無形之中揭露社會黑暗現實。代表作《有紅色小鳥的風景》《我是阿里斯》《黃色的星期天》《正午的傳說》《有死屍的風景》《飛呀、飛呀!蝸牛》《媽媽、媽媽、媽媽!》《有氣氛的屍體》《會議》《星星的時間》《可以睡覺》等。
***
《三美神:日本極短篇小說選》柏谷譯,台北:爾雅,1992: 別役實「名畫劇場」
- 別役実の名画劇場 パロディ・シアター 王国社 1985
The Three Graces may refer to:
- Charites, three goddesses in Greek mythology (Euphrosyne, Aglaia, and Thalia), in whom beauty was deified
Arts and entertainment[edit]
Paintings[edit]
- Primavera (Botticelli), a 15th-century painting by Botticelli
- The Three Graces (Cranach), a 1531 painting by Lucas Cranach the Elder
- Three Graces (Raphael), a 16th-century painting by Raphael
- The Three Graces (Rubens, monochrome), a 1620–1623 painting by Peter Paul Rubens
- The Three Graces (Rubens), a 17th-century painting by Rubens
- The Three Graces, a painting by Michael Parkes
Sculptures[edit]
- The Three Graces (d'Antoine) (Trois Graces), an 18th-century fountain by Étienne d'Antoine in the Place de la Comédie, Montpellier, France
- The Three Graces (sculpture), a 19th-century neoclassical sculpture by Antonio Canova
- The Three Graces (Indianapolis), a 19th- or 20th-century neoclassical sculpture by an unknown artist, located at the Indianapolis Museum of Art
- The Three Graces (Whitney), a 1931 fountain by Gertrude Vanderbilt Whitney at McGill University in Montreal
- Nymph (Central Figure for "The Three Graces"), a 1953 sculpture by Aristide Maillol
- Three Graces (Mack), a 1965 abstract sculpture by Heinz Mack, located at the Lynden Sculpture Garden
- Les Trois Grâces, a 1999 sculpture by Niki de Saint Phalle
Opera[edit]
- The Three Graces, a 1908 opera that opened at the Chicago Opera House and starred such performers as Trixie Friganza
- The Three Graces (Три грации), a 1988 Russian opera parody composed by Vladimir Tarnopolsky
Other uses[edit]
- Theological virtues, specifically faith, hope and charity
- The Three Graces, consisting of the Royal Liver Building, Cunard Building and Port of Liverpool Building on the Pier Head in Liverpool, England
- The Three Graces of Admin, three minor characters in the British situation comedy Campus
- "The Bachelor and Three Graces", a set of four sequoia trees growing, with intertwined roots, in Mariposa Grove, Yosemite National Park
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別役 実(べっちゃく みのる、べつやく みのる 1937年4月6日 - 2020年3月3日)は、日本の劇作家、童話作家、評論家、随筆家である[1][2]。サミュエル・ベケットの影響を受け、日本の不条理演劇を確立した第一人者である。日本藝術院会員。
In Greek mythology, a Charis (/ˈkeɪrɪs/; Greek: Χάρις, pronounced [kʰáris]) or Grace is one of three or more goddesses of charm, beauty, nature, human creativity, goodwill, and fertility, together known as the Charites /ˈkærɪtiːz/ (Χάριτες [kʰáritɛs]) or Graces.[1] The usual roster, as given in Hesiod, is Aglaea ("Shining"), Euphrosyne ("Joy"), and Thalia ("Blooming").[2][1] Hesiod states that Aglaea is the youngest of this group and the wife of Hephaestus.[3] In Roman mythology they were known as the Gratiae, the "Graces". In some variants, Charis was one of the Charites, who was equated with Aglaea rather than a singular form of the name, as she too is referred to as the wife of Hephaestus.[4]
The Charites were usually considered the daughters of Zeus and Oceanid Eurynome.[2] Rarely, they were said to be daughters of Dionysus and Coronis[5] or of Helios and the Naiad Aegle[6][7] or of Hera by an unnamed father.[8] Other possible names of their mother by Zeus are Eurydome, Eurymedousa, or Euanthe.[9] Homer identified them as part of the retinue of Aphrodite. The Charites were also associated with the Greek underworld and the Eleusinian Mysteries.
In painting and sculpture, the three Charites or Graces are often depicted naked or almost naked, however, during the Archaic and Classical periods of Greece, they were typically depicted as fully clothed.[1]
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