George Bellows's paintings from World War I, large-scale works that depict German atrocities, strive for the visceral power of Francisco de Goya's "Disasters of War," but they seem to be more about sadism than barbarity. "The Germans Arrive" (1918) shows a shirtless boy with his hands cut off by thuggish soldiers.
Gift of Ian and Annette Cumming; Courtesy National Gallery of Art, Washington/
Manzarek co-founded the Doors after meeting then-poet Jim Morrison in California. The band went on to become one of the most successful rock-and-roll...
For centuries, merchants have traveled to Ethiopia’s Danakil Depression with caravans of camels to collect salt from the surface of the vast desert basin. The mineral is extracted...
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