The conversation between Roy Lichtenstein and Melinda Camber Porter took place on December 18, 1983, when Roy Lichtenstein's Greene Street Mural drew crowds to Leo Castelli's landmark SoHo Greene Street Gallery in downtown New York. Roy Lichtenstein describes to Melinda Camber Porter the many influences on his art from the Renaissance painters to Japanese art in terms of his brush strokes, perspective, and styles.Melinda Camber Porter asks Roy Lichtenstein, "What kind of emotions were you expressing in the Green Street Mural?" Roy Lichtenstein responds, "The emotions I deal with are placement and a kinesthetic sense of position and color. I am removed from the emotions I am depicting because they are usually ironic or are even silly sometimes. But the emotion a painting contains should be a unity. And it is another emotion altogether." From Melinda Camber Porter In Conversation With Roy Lichtenstein (ISBN: 978-1-942231-09-7).Melinda Camber Porter passed away from ovarian cancer in 2008 and she left a significant body of work in art, journalism, and literature. The Melinda Camber Porter Archive provides for the continuation and expansion of the ideas expressed through her art, journalism, and literature.The Melinda Camber Porter Archive of Creative Works comprises two series of books. Volume 1 are books of journalism. Volume 2 are books of art and literature. (ISSN: 2379-2450 (Print); ISSN: 2379-3198 (E-book); and ISSN: 2379-321X (Audiobook)).
Melinda Camber Porter in Conversation with Joyce Carol Oates Forward by: Cathy Suter, artist and writer ISSN: Volume 1, Number 6 Hardcover: (ISBN: 978-1-942231-03-5), 81/2x11, $49.99 (2017). (98 pages, photo illustrated, index, and bibliography) Ebook: (ISBN: 978-1-942231-20-2), $3.99 (2017). See Melinda Camber Porter on YouTube... Melinda Camber Porter interview with Joyce Carol Oates took place in 1987 at her Princeton University Office at the time of the publication of her book On Boxing. They noted it as a highly unusual topic for a female writer. Joyce Carol Oates grew up at an early age attending boxing matches with her father and thus the book. Their conversations ranged from boxing to her writings, writers, and her writing process and styles. This title includes the differences noted in American and European writers. In 1987, Joyce Carol Oates notes the American infatuation with celebrities and names as examples Henry Ford, PT Barnum and Donald Trump In the Foreward Cathy Suter, writer and artist, notes the metaphor for the creative writing process and writer's block described by Joyce Carol Oates, when she compares it to, "mowing very wet, chunky grass with a hand mower, pushing through big patches of lawn and having to go over it again and again, until getting it just right." Melinda Camber Porter passed away of ovarian cancer in 2008 and left a significant body of work in art, journalism, and literature. The Melinda Camber Porter Archive wishes to share these conversations with the public to ensure the continuation and expansion of the ideas expressed in her creative works. Melinda Camber Porter Archive of Creative Works ISSN: 2379-2450 (Print), 2379-3198 (E-Book), 2379-321X (Audio) Joseph R. Flicek, Director flicekjr@pipeline.com USA 1-347-782-1653 www.MelindaCamberPorter.com http: //en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Melinda_Camber_Porter Melinda Camber Porter's YouTube Channel: https: //www.youtube.com/channel/UCIflCaF2qpHh8uQgffSXLDQ
With this publication, Melinda Camber Porter In Conversation With Eugenio Montale, Milan, Italy, 1976 (ISBN: 978-1-942231-15-8), we have an opportunity to listen to the strong voice of Eugenio Montale (1975 recipient of the Nobel Prize in Literature) discussing poetry and its role in society with Melinda Camber Porter.
Melinda Camber Porter has interviewed the most prominent Parisian cultural figures of the '70s and '80s. The dominant trends in French artistic and political thought emerge vividly from an array of portraits and dialogues. As a whole, Through Parisian Eyes creates a seamless and revealing depiction of French culture.
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