Friday, 19 April 2013

Research For FMP


Hans Christian Andersen

1835 The Tinder-Box
1835 Little Claus and Big Claus
1835 The Princess and the Pea
1835 Little Ida’s Flowers
1835 Little Tiny or Thumbelin
1835 The Saucy Boy
1835 The Travelling Companion
1836 The Little Mermaid
1837 The Emperor’s New Suit
1838 The Goloshes of Fortune
1838 The Daisy
1838 The Brave Tin Soldier
1838 The Wild Swans
1838 The Garden of Paradise
1838 The Flying Trunk
1838 The Storks
1839 The Elf of the Rose
1840 What the Moon Saw
1840 The Wicked Prince
1842 The Metal Pig
1842 The Shepherd’s Story of the Bond of Friendship
1842 A Rose from Homer’s Grave
1842 The Buckwheat
1842 Ole-Luk-Oie, the Dream-God
1842 The Swineherd
1844 The Angel
1844 The Nightingale
1844 The Ugly Duckling
1844 The Top and Ball
1845 The Fir Tree
1845 The Snow Queen
1845 The Little Elder-Tree Mother
1845 The Elfin Hill
1845 The Red Shoes
1845 The Jumper
1845 The Shepherdess and the Sweep
1845 Holger Danske
1845 The Bell
1845 Grandmother
1846 The Darning-Needle
1846 The Little Match-Seller
1847 The Sunbeam and the Captive
1847 By the Almshouse Window
1847 The Old Street Lamp
1847 The Neighbouring Families
1847 Little Tuk
1847 The Shadow
1848 The Old House
1848 The Drop of Water
1848 The Happy Family
1848 The Story of a Mother
1848 The Shirt-Collar
1849 The Flax
1850 The Phoenix Bird
1851 A Story
1851 The Pigs
1851 The Puppet-Show Man
1851 The Dumb Book
1852 The Old Grave-Stone
1852 The Conceited Apple-Branch
1852 The Loveliest Rose in the World
1852 In a Thousand Years
1852 The Swan’s Nest
1852 The Story of the Year
1852 On Judgment Day
1852 “There Is No Doubt About It.”
1852 A Cheerful Temper
1853 A Great Grief
1853 Everything in the Right Place
1853 The Goblin and the Huckster
1853 Under the Willow-tree
1853 The Pea Blossom
1853 She Was Good for Nothing
1854 The Last Pearl
1854 Two Maidens
1855 “In the Uttermost Parts of the Sea”
1855 The Money-Box
1855 A Leaf from Heaven
1855 Jack the Dullard
1855 Ib and Little Christina
1856 The Thorny Road of Honor
“The Will-o-the Wisp Is in the Town”, Says the Moor-Woman
1865 The Windmill
1865 In the Nursery
1865 The Golden Treasure
1865 The Storm Shakes the Shield
1866 “Delaying Is Not Forgetting”
1866 The Porter’s Son
1866 Our Aunt
1866 The Toad
1867 Vænø and Glænø
1868 The Little Green Ones
1868 The Goblin and the Woman(**)
1868 Peiter, Peter and Peer
1868 Godfather’s Picture Book
1868 Which is the Happiest?
1868 The Dryad
1869 The Days of the Week
1869 The Court Cards(**)
1869 Luck May Lie in a Pin(*)
1869 Sunshine Stories(**)
1869 The Comet
1869 The Rags
1869 What One Can Invent
1869 The Thistle’s Experiences
1869 Poultry Meg’s Family
1870 The Candles(*)
1870 Great-Grandfather
1870 The Most Incredible Thing(*)
1870 Danish Popular Legends
1870 What the Whole Family Said
1870 Lucky Peer
1871 Dance, Dance, Doll of Mine!
1871 The Great Sea-Serpent
1871 The Gardener and the Manor
1872 What Old Johanne Told
1872 The Gate Key
1872 The Cripple(*)
1872 Aunty Toothache
1873 The Flea and the Professor
1926 Croak
1926 The Penman
1949 Folks Say—
1949 The Poor Woman and the Little Canary Bird
1949 Urbanus
hca.gilead.org.il


Hans Christian Andersen (Danish: [ˈhanˀs ˈkʁæsdjan ˈɑnɐsn̩]; often referred to in Scandinavia as H. C. Andersen; April 2, 1805 – August 4, 1875) was a Danish author and poet. Although a prolific writer of plays, travelogues, novels, and poems, Andersen is best remembered for his fairy tales, a literary genre he so mastered that he himself has become as mythical as the tales he wrote. Andersen's popularity is not limited to children; his stories—called eventyr, or "fantastic tales"—express themes that transcend age and nationality.
During his lifetime he was acclaimed for having delighted children worldwide and was feted by royalty. Andersen's fairy tales, which have been translated into more than 125 languages, have become culturally embedded in the West's collective consciousness, readily accessible to children, but presenting lessons of virtue and resilience in the face of adversity for mature readers as well. They have inspired motion pictures, plays, ballets, and animated films.
Wiki.com

Charles Perrault
Charles Perrault (12 January 1628 – 16 May 1703) was a French author and member of the Académie française. He laid the foundations for a new literary genre, the fairy tale, with his works derived from pre-existing folk tales. The best known of his tales include Le Petit Chaperon rouge (Little Red Riding Hood), Cendrillon (Cinderella), Le Chat Botté (Puss in Boots) and La Barbe bleue (Bluebeard).[1] Many of Perrault's stories were rewritten by the Brothers Grimm, continue to be printed and have been adapted to opera, ballet (such as Tchaikovsky's The Sleeping Beauty), theatre, and film (Disney). Perrault was an influential figure in the 17th century French literary scene, and was the leader of the Modern faction during the Quarrel of the Ancients and the Moderns.
Wiki.com

Cinderella, or The Little Glass Slipper
The Sleeping Beauty In The Woods
Little Thumb
The Master Cat, Or Puss In Boots
Riquet With The Tuft
Blue Beard
The Fairy
Little Red Riding-Hood
Worldoftales.com

Alternative Fashion Week
Alternative Fashion Week is unlike any other fashion week. Open to everyone and free to the designers to participate, the energy and atmosphere are palpable. Running for a full week with 15 shows a day, attracting audiences of over 10,000 and with a vibrant fashion market of wild and wonderful accessories, this event is a prime example of how imagination and resourcefulness can overcome a mountain of economic obstacles and promote sustainability.
Alternativearts.co.uk

Graduate Fashion Week
Showcasing the work of over 1,000 graduates from some of the most influential UK and international universities, Graduate Fashion Week represents the future of creative design talent. Attracting over 20,000 guests each June, the event features 22 catwalk shows, large exhibition from over 40 universities and an acclaimed Gala Award Show.
Gfw.org.uk

Trashion
Trashion (a portmanteau of "trash" and "fashion") is a term for art, jewelry, fashion and objects for the home created from used, thrown-out, found and repurposed elements. The term was first coined in New Zealand in 2004 and gained in usage through 2005. Trashion is a sub genre of found art, which is basically using objects that already have some other defined purpose, and turning it into art. In this case, trash is used.
Wiki.com

Science Museum, Trash Fashion
Britain loves high-street fashion. Tempted by rock-bottom prices we’re buying a third more clothing than we did a decade ago. New looks on the catwalk and cut-price competition in the high street mean greater turnover – but more than a million tonnes of textiles end up in landfill each year. Dyes run, polymers break down and toxic chemicals ooze into the environment.
http://antenna.sciencemuseum.org.uk/trashfashion/

The Grayson Perry Project
Grayson Perry, the more-than-a-bit famous British artist has been on TV lately talking about taste – and for the last eight years, has been taste-testing the work of CSM students in the mother of summer uni projects, his very own module, The Grayson Perry Project.
Students of Central Saint Martins College of Art and Design are very lucky. They have world class tutors, a giant shiny new house in Kings Cross and Grayson Perry as their live model and muse. The Grayson Perry Project (it does not abbreviate) started in 2004, when Perry bumped into his friend Natalie Gibson, the Fashion Print tutor referred to by her students as ‘the pink haired fairy’, on the bus on his way into town. Eight years on, this is how it works: students are given The Grayson Perry Project brief, they work on designs for the artist to wear as his alter ego ‘Claire’, and once completed, Perry attends and models in the crit. A crit, if you’ve had the academic misfortune to experience one, can be excruciatingly scary. But less so when Grayson Perry Irish jigs through it, while modelling the clothes and commenting on them as he performs; Perry even buys his favourite garments from the students for £500 a pop. Relishing the opportunity to get to know their module better, this year’s conscientious students asked Perry a few things about Claire, pop and corrugated cardboard.
http://i-donline.com/2012/07/the-grayson-perry-project/

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