Pavilion Essays

  • Carowinds Versus the Pavilion

    635 Words  | 2 Pages

    Carowinds Versus the Pavilion Whenever considering what amusement park you would like to attend to, you look for the one with the best rides, atmosphere, admission. Carowinds is a better amusement park than The Pavilion when considering types of rides, atmosphere, and cost of admission. Carowinds is compiled of many gravity-defying rides. Top Gun: The Jet Coaster is the Carolinas’ only inverted steel roller coaster. While on the ride, you are hurled through six swirling inversions while in the air

  • Colosseum and the Speckles Organ Pavilion

    753 Words  | 2 Pages

    Colosseum and the Speckles Organ Pavilion The city of San Diego has always been a popular site for tourists. Balboa Park is one of the main tourist sites that is home to an enormous collection of art, history and science museums, galleries, and the old globe theatres and the world famous San Diego zoo. Many of these buildings and musuems are based on Aztec and Spanish architecture. Unlike other buildings in Balboa Park, the Speckles Organ Pavilion has a unique blend of ancient Roman and western

  • The Royal Pavilion

    2179 Words  | 5 Pages

    The Royal Pavilion The Royal Pavilion was a very fashionable building in it's day. The architecture was quite fashionable as it used the idillic style which was fashionable and the farmhouse idea was fashionable, however the Indian style the Royal Pavilion used was unfashionable. On the outside of the Pavilion the Prince also used the neo-classical style which was fashionable back then. Trompe l'oeil was a fashionable interior design which the Prince used. However the Prince did use chinoiserie

  • The Peony Pavilion

    1833 Words  | 4 Pages

    The Peony Pavilion is a Chinese play written by Tang Xianzu and first performed as Kunqu in 1598. Tang Xianzu was one of the greatest poet-playwright that lived in Ming dynasty of China. The Peony Pavilion was a very popular play on that time, and it was also a very long play that had total fifty-five scenes. The Peony Pavilion is not only told a story of love but also revealed women in the feudalistic society of China was mostly control by clan and didn't have chances to do what they wanted to do

  • Kunqu Opera from the Peony Pavilion

    891 Words  | 2 Pages

    The Peony Pavilion, a Kunqu Opera. Kunqu Opera is a form of Chinese musical drama consisting of three components that work concurrently and in synchronization. The Qing Yi Arias adheres to these principles and is successful in executing them. The recital was composed of three performers, Ms. Yang Ling as Qing Yi, a virtuous and noble woman, Mr. Chen Tao on Kundi, a bamboo flute and Mr. Huang Shi-Rong on percussion. This performance in particular featured two scenes from the Peony Pavilion, “Stroll

  • Le Corbusier: Philips Pavilion, Brussels, 1958

    2104 Words  | 5 Pages

    Philips Pavilion, Brussels, 1958 Located in a small site next to the Dutch section and away from the center of the fair, the pavilion hosted a futuristic multimedia display featuring images, colored lighting and music and sounds called the "Poème Electronique." Some of the greatest artistic minds of the twentieth century were involved in its creation, including the architect Le Corbusier (1887-1965) and the composer Edgard Varèse (1883-1965). But most importantly, the Philips Pavilion represented

  • My Lucky Paintball Shirt: Journal Entry

    604 Words  | 2 Pages

    can remember when this same old shirt was relatively new……….. It was a hot humid morning when a few friends and myself drove into the parking lot of my favorite paintball field. We unpacked the car and found an unoccupied picnic table under the pavilion. We registered ourselves and suited up. I put on my camouflaged jumpsuit over my shorts and unstained gray t-shirt. The referees rounded all the players up and put us on teams, all of us were blue. The first game was in a field the shape of a banana

  • Romantic Love in Marie de France’s Poem, Lanval

    645 Words  | 2 Pages

    at King Arthur's court, as she eclipses even Queen Guenever. Much like an editor of a modern woman's fashion magazine, Marie targets her audience of mostly aristocratic twelfth-century women. She describes a mysterious lady whose retinue, meadow pavilion, clothing, figure, cultured sentiments, deportment, and conduct depict her as a superior being. Lanval's mistress is a model Marie's readers should emulate, a woman who imparts to her readers hints on fashion, grooming, how to please one's lover

  • The Harem – A Rare a Privilege of the Rich

    1463 Words  | 3 Pages

    course, the Sultan’s family—his wives and concubines, and their children.”2[2] To adequately house all the people and provide for their needs, the harem was not a confined room or small are but a large place containing gardens, courts, the Sultan’s pavilion, and many other rooms among them housing for the women.3[3] The harem itself was stratified into different levels; as only certain people could enter, it needed its own governing system. The higher your level in the harem system, the more privilege

  • John-Jin by Rose Tremain

    507 Words  | 2 Pages

    John-Jin by Rose Tremain is a short story with two main characters. We have John-Jin himself, who was Chinese and born with a disease that held back his growth. He would only grow in minute little bursts. When John-Jin became older his adopted parents took him to Manchester to see a specialist who then started him on treatments of growth hormone shots. Things started to look up but after ten years when John-Jin was 12, the shots took a bad affect on him and he developed Creutzfeldt and Jacob disease

  • A History of the Brooklyn Botanic Garden

    1178 Words  | 3 Pages

    varieties; The Herb Garden, with more than 300 varieties -- "herbing" is apparently taking the country by storm as people rediscover medicinal, culinary, and other uses; and The Japanese Hill-and-Pond Garden, a beautiful creation featuring a Viewing Pavilion, Waiting House, Torri, shrines, bridges, stone lanterns, waterfalls, pond, and miniaturized landscape. About half of the BBG's 52 acres is devoted to the Systematic Collections: trees, shrubs, and herbaceous plants arranged to show their evolutionary

  • Monticello: Jefferson’s Dream

    2118 Words  | 5 Pages

    elegant, and in the Italian taste, though not without fault; it consists of one large square pavilion, the entrance to which is by two porticoes, ornamented with pillars. The ground floor consists chiefly of a very large, lofty saloon which is to be decorated entirely in the antique style; above it is a library of the same form; two small wings with only a ground floor and attic story, are joined to this pavilion, and communicate with the kitc... ... middle of paper ... ...f tending to the fields

  • Le Corbusier

    1573 Words  | 4 Pages

    but they influenced other architects throughout the world. Examples of his work are the Unité d'habitation, Marseille (1945--50); Chandigarh, the new capital of the Punjab; the Swiss Dormitory in the Cité Universitaire in Paris; and the Exposition Pavilion in Zürich. In 1920 he started publishing his magazine L'Esprit Nouveau, until his death in 1965. He inspired several generations of architects not only in Europe but also around the world. He was more than a mercurial innovator. Irascible, caustic

  • My Antonia

    1606 Words  | 4 Pages

    and Jim. A couple of years later, the Burdens decide to move into town, and shortly thereafter Antonia takes a job as a housekeeper with a neighboring family, the Harlings. Jim begins to see more of Antonia once again, especially when a dancing pavilion comes to town and enlivens the social situation. Jim's high school years quickly come to a close, and he is offered a spot at the university in Lincoln. He makes a great success of his commencement speech, and spends the summer hard at work in

  • Jim Jones

    1653 Words  | 4 Pages

    Jonestown can be viewed as the product of obedience, of people complying with the orders of a leader and reacting to the threat of force. In the Peoples Temple, whatever Jim Jones commanded, the members did. When he gathered the community at the pavilion and the poison was brought out, the populace was surrounded by armed guards who were trusted lieutenants of Jones. There are reports that some people did not drink voluntarily but had the poison forced down their throats or injected. While there

  • Guernica by Pablo Picasso

    1809 Words  | 4 Pages

    Pablo Picasso painted Guernica, oil on canvas. The Republican Spanish government commissioned the mural for the 1937 World Fair in Paris. Guernica is a large mural, twenty-six feet wide and eleven feet tall, and was placed at the entrance to Spain’s pavilion. Picasso did not do any work after receiving the commission until reading of the bombing of the Basque village of Guernica, in Spain. It was that attack, perpetrated by the German Luftwaffe, that inspired him. Guernica, however, is not a complete

  • The Barcelona Pavilion Essay

    1400 Words  | 3 Pages

    The German Pavilion, later known as the Barcelona Pavilion, gently hovers above the ground on a low raised platform, in Barcelona Spain. Recognized as the one of the initial expressions of Germany taking a step towards representing themselves in a more modern approach. the German Pavilion was the face of Germany after the first world war as an act of departure and resistance against classically fixed Germany. Commissioned by the German Reich’s government, for the installation hosting of King Alfonoso

  • Soviet Union's Pavilion Analysis

    1854 Words  | 4 Pages

    create a pavilion representing their ideas for a new style of architecture. Most of these pavilions were devoted to the cinema, to radio, light, the railway, flight, refrigeration, and printing (Culturedarm, 2018). Germany, the Soviet Union, and Italy all took this opportunity to present their national and political stances through their architecture. However, the German pavilion was located directly opposite the Soviet Union’s pavilion and

  • Temple Of The Golden Pavilion Essay

    568 Words  | 2 Pages

    Yukio Mishima’s Temple of the Golden Pavilion, set in postwar Japan, gives way to a reflection of the postwar experience both the representation of military aggression and in use of symbolism of beauty, loss, and destruction. A story about Mizoguchi, a young, stuttering acolyte’s obsession with beauty lends itself to the conflagration of the Temple of the Golden Pavilion, based loosely on a true story about the Kinkaku-ji. War and its effects are references throughout the novel, giving a window

  • Barcelona Pavilion Case Study

    940 Words  | 2 Pages

    The German Pavilion, more commonly known as the Barcelona Pavilion, is one of the most recognizable buildings of the modern period during the early 20th century. It encapsulates every element of modern architecture in one structure. Ludwig Mies van der Rohe, one of the fathers of modern architecture, was the architect of this beautiful building. In this essay I will explore how Mies impacted the modern movement in architecture through his groundbreaking ideas using the Barcelona Pavilion as a case