psychoactive effects and chemical makeup are contested, its cultural impact is not. Absinthe has played a notable role in the fine art movements of Impressionism...
29 KB (3,514 words) - 03:22, 10 September 2024
Absinthe (/ˈæbsɪnθ, -sæ̃θ/, French: [apsɛ̃t] ) is an anise-flavored spirit derived from several plants, including the flowers and leaves of Artemisia absinthium...
100 KB (10,885 words) - 10:20, 23 October 2024
L'Absinthe (redirect from Glass of Absinthe)
ambivalent about the painting and sold it in April 1893 to a Paris dealer. Cultural references to absinthe Automat, similar subject Plum Brandy, similar subject...
8 KB (782 words) - 14:32, 18 July 2024
Morisot, Degas and Cassatt. New York: Harcourt, 2005. p. 77 Doris Lanier, Absinthe, the Cocaine of the Nineteenth Century: A History of the Hallucinogenic...
13 KB (1,582 words) - 01:49, 1 November 2024
Decadence (redirect from Cultural decay)
painting is a blow to morality, as a glass filled with Absinthe, an alcoholic drink, rests in front of a woman at a table. Taken to be in bad faith and...
33 KB (4,069 words) - 04:51, 19 October 2024
in another French novel La lumière et la boue: Quand surgira l'étoile absinthe by Michel Peyramaure (1992). Edward appears as the Prince of Wales in World...
11 KB (1,564 words) - 23:54, 9 September 2023
Antoine Blanchard, and Édouard Cortès. It is the setting for the poem The Absinthe Drinkers by the Canadian poet Robert Service and a short story My Old Man...
6 KB (676 words) - 13:04, 22 August 2024
Marilyn Manson (category Converts to new religious movements from Christianity)
paintings were extremely sensitive to the flash. Manson launched "Mansinthe", his own brand of Swiss-made absinthe, which has received mixed reviews;...
227 KB (18,994 words) - 01:04, 29 October 2024
came to using absinthe in the cabarets. Aside from this artistic "methodology", there were other reasons for drinking. The general public came to the cafés...
29 KB (3,742 words) - 13:23, 21 October 2024