Recommended: Critical essays about Abstract Expressionism
Roberto Jordan Mr. Brown Law and Order II 28 April 2015 Richard Kuklinski Richard Kuklinski was born on April ri" of 1935. Richard was an all-American Contract Killer who was said to work with several Italian-American Mafia crime syndicates. It was said that Richard Kuklinski murdered over 200 people within a 30 year career. Richard lived two lives, the family man being one and the other being a cold blooded killer with no remorse. Richards's younger brother was a convicted rapist and murderer, his name was Joseph Kuklinski.
Jack Patton Dixon Criminal Justice 23 October 2017 Richard Kuklinski Richard Kuklinski is one of the most well-known serial killers in history. He was convicted of killing five people, but could have killed anywhere from one-hundred to two-hundred people. He is a very unique serial killer for many reasons. One reason is because he was paid to kill people. Most serial killers feel a compulsion to kill because of lust, anger, or similar reasons.
HARRISBURG, Pa. (Reuters) - A Pennsylvania man and his wife were each sentenced to up to four decades in state prison on Wednesday after pleading guilty in the murder of their disabled nine-year-old son, who was found starved to death in a dark, feces-smeared room last year. Judge John Cherry of Dauphin County Court of Common Pleas said Jarrod Tutko Sr., 39, and Kimberly Tutko, 40, were equally culpable in the death of Jarrod Tutko Jr. and the near-death of his sister Arianna, now 12. He sentenced the father to 21 to 42 years in prison, and gave his wife a sentence of 20 to 40 years.
In the future city of Seattle Washington lived a fifteen year old boy named Ponky. Ponky was a Spanish boy always had a dirty look even though everybody in the town liked him. He always wore cargo shorts and a tank top with his gang’s bandana on his head. Ponky lived with his brother and gang in a house that they bought together with money that they stole from the city or that they earned at work, which was robbing or theft. Ponky lived in the poor side of the city or basically in a town with small brick buildings and trash all over the streets it was basically home of the criminals or the no good people, as said by the mayor that started the whole poor criminals on one side and the rich people on the other.
David Berkowitz had risen to recognition with his terror spree throughout New York. When I think of the words serial killer, I think of Ted Bundy or Jeffory Dahmer first. Serial killers all have one thing in common: they killed multiple people in a period. David Berkowitz is classified as a serial killer. Berkowitz had a compelling life from his childhood to his murder spree, to his arrest.
Antonin Dvorak (1841-1904) was a Czech composer that blended folksong and dance music into his symphonies. Dvorak grew up in a small villa near the capital city Prague of the Czech Republic. Coming from a poor family, Dvorak left his home at sixteen to study music in Prague. For nearly the next two decades of his life, Dvorak played violin in an opera-orchestra and made many attempts to step into the spotlight with no avail. Then at age thirty-six, the great Johannes Brahms recommended Dvorak’s to be published.
Igor Stravinsky At the beginning of the 20th century, and a little while before, music began to drastically change. Alongside such great composers as Debussy and Ravel, Igor Stravinsky carved out his own niche as a magnificent 20th century composer. In the fashion of Debussy, Stravinsky blatantly ignored the rules which were slowly becoming obsolete and created new masterpieces that slowly won over the masses. Despite the current attitude of ignoring the old, Stravinsky sought to revitalize forgotten periods such as the Baroque and Classical.
Whitney Chadwick writes about the history behind what artists do and why along with the influences on society. She looked at the art pieces that she chose and gave a well listed history on the subjects she chose. She tells the fact, not giving her emotions, but the truths of what it was that happened very plain. It is as if it just is what is and there is not joy or sorrow that it happened. She translates the meanings and has assumptions to why something was inspired and she gives them.
which revitalized the theater’s movement towards taking a modern approach to a previously stiff and bureaucratic scene (Stuart). As a whole, Aleko was an enormous success and paved the way for his works in the theater. It also gave Chagall an opportunity for him to begin to think about “color as being something quite parallel to music in a way that he was able to create a kind of universe that was open and conducive to this very immediate and vibrant expression" (Grace). The musical score and the paintings become intertwined as Chagall paints the euphoric feeling the music effuses.
Throughout human history, art has always served a revolutionary purpose in our culture. Much of the time, these artists and leaders have been labeled as radicals and outcasts, only to be accepted by the mainstream years later. Artists are true progressives and have influence over society, media, architecture, entertainment, and various other aspects of life. In Germany during the nineteenth century, political leaders realized this and attempted to put a halt to art that they felt damaged society and insulted German feeling. In 1937, the Nazi party asked a panel to purge what Hitler described as “degenerate art” and then put the art in an exhibit to be shown off to officials as propaganda.
Although Schnittke studied and later taught at the Moscow Conservatory, his approach in composing still held influences of his education in Vienna during his adolescent years. Schnittke 's music comprises of a distinctive feature, the polystylistic idiom, which can be found all over his extensive repertory. Towards the latter years of his life, Schnittke suffered a series of strokes, but notwithstanding, his compositional creativity did not falter, rather, it flourishes even more. Assessing Schnittke 's extensive oeuvre, one would not pick up on his serialism, but instead, will perceive the eccentricity of his style. "I set down a beautiful chord on paper—and suddenly it rusts."
In his time, Beethoven composed expressive music that nobody ever thought of before. He purposely added in expressive mood swings and dramatic volume on purpose. In this era, composers made music based on religious, social, or boring topics. He was one of the first to make music for his own motives. The pieces
3 and Four Pieces for Piano, Op. 4 to demonstrate the development of his innovative style, and compare them with Sarcasms in aspects of harmony, rhythm, piano devices, and texture to show the innovations Prokofiev applied in the
Igor Stravinsky was born in Russia on the 17th of June 1882. In Oranienbaum, a suburb of St Petersburg. He lives in a family of to his father was a musician. His father Fyodor Stravinsky was a bass singer at the Mariinsky Theater in St Petersburg. So at a very young age Igor Stravinsky was exposed to music.
It is one of the truest statements of music ever composed. For Fredric Chopin and Pyotr Ilich Tchaikovsky these distinct expressions of the soul which were consequently affected by upbringing, influences, innovations, and era, transformed their music into masterpieces still appreciated