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Convenient Tips On Picasso Did Drugs

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pablo-picasso-paintings Convenient tips on picasso Did Drugs

When I saw this for the first time it was the original painting. I looked all over for a duplicate of the painting but couldn’t find it for under $250 so I bought the poster optimistically thinking it wouldn’t capture the same detail, I was dead wrong this is by far the best poster I have in my house. I get compliments about it all the time and it still captures the same realism as the original, you can also put it in a nice frame and people won’t be able to tell the difference:^)

PLEASE HELP!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!?
ok, so i am not a very good writer and i am awful at punctuation and grammar and focusing my ideas. I was wondering if you could read this and give me help with what i should do and maybe help me with comma’s and maybe a bettervocabularye choice.So here are the first 3 pharagraph:In The Great Gatsby, F. Scott Fitzgerald creates Daisy as a “golden girl,” the woman that has it all. He paints Daisy much the same way as Picasso painted “Girl before a Mirror.”People Daisy as beautiful, charming, and wealthy instead of as greedy, deceitful and deeply shallow. Daisy’s true reflection is not beautiful. Living a life of unearned privileges corrupts Daisy, making her character void of individual strength, integrity, and depth of character. Daisy has a conflict between her inner and outer self and sadly becomes a self-absorbed, feeble woman that single minded relies on the opinion of others for the choices in her life. Daisy Buchanan is a symbol of extreme wealth in the 1920’s. People like tom and daisy center their lives on themselves, money and materialistic items. Daisy’s total dependence on men illustrates her lack of individuality. Daisy’s thoughts and opinions’ are futile while with Tom. Daisy recoils back to Tom after Myrtle’s death. After the car accident Nick sees Tom and Daisy talking and says, “There was an unmistakable air of natural intimacy about the picture and anybody would have said that they were conspiring together” (152). Being with Tom provides Daisy privileges without responsibility, allowing her-self to be controlled and manipulated by Tom and his security. Here picasso Did Drugs Daisy chooses to come back to Tom, after killing myrtle because her self centered nature knows that through his undeserved money every thing can go away. By choosing Tom over Gatsby, Daisy’s heedless attitude toward myrtles death has no effect upon her and also shows her disloyalty to Gatsby. Another example of her utter dependence upon men was when Gatsby left for war and Daisy started, “keeping half a dozen dates a day with half a dozen men and drowsing asleep at dawn” (158). Fitzgerald clearly shows how absolutely dependent she is upon men. Always needing a man by her side Daisy prevents herself from experiencing responsibility for her actions. Also displaying Daisy’s dishonest and unfaithfulness toward Gatsby by have all these other men in her life that she does not even care about. Though Daisy requires the protection of a man in her life, Nick says, she wanted her life shaped now, immediately— and the decision must be made by some force—of love, of money, of unquestionable practicality”(159). Daisy looks for someone willing to shape her life. The quality of relying on men robs her from the ability to stand for herself. Here daisy’s self-centeredness causes her to be fully reliant on men to shape her life and give her a life of unquestionable practicality. . Relying only on the power of money or possessed by empty love does not allow Daisy to have personal convictions of her own.Possessions are another component of Daisy double life. Surrounding her life by tangible objects only excludes Daisy more from experiencing true life. Daisy has beautiful wealth, the type that no one can tough. Nick says, “that wealth imprisons and preserves, of the freshness of many cloths and of Daisy, gleaming like silver safe and proud above the hot struggles of the poor” (157). Nick describes Daisy as a silver tangible object, saying that Daisy is worth no more that a piece of silver. Here Daisy’s worth in the world is described as some type of clothing a person could wear once and then put away. From Nick’s perspective Daisy gleams like silver imprisoned by her own wealth but refuses to even touch the poor. Daisy’s wealth acts as a drug to her by imprisoning her, and shielding her from the troubles in her life. Just like she disregards Gatsby because he does not possess the power to keep her imprisoned from the world. Money goes to Daisy’s head and corrupts her mind to believe that the struggles of the poor are of no consequence to her, just like Myrtles death does not affect. Money corrupts Daisy’s life because she has never lived without money and does not know what to do with someone or something that money cannot control or fix. When Daisy and Nick meet again, she tells him about her daughter and says, “I hope she’ll be a fool –that’s the best thing a girl can be in this world today, a beautiful little fool” (21). Here Daisy says that being a fool is the best way to live her life. She wants her daughter to be a fool just like her. Daisy talks about her daughter and her self as possessions or things that should be admired and wanted. Not only does Daisy want to be a fool but she has a need to be possessed by others and by Tom. Money controls Daisy’s life causing deceiving thoughts and feeling for people and items.
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picasso Did Drugs

pablo-picasso-paintings Convenient tips on picasso Did Drugs

{ 2 comments }

Nuelle October 10, 2010 at 9:39 pm

It’s a huge poster! Though the paper is not the best for painting reproductions (I’d say it’s paper for movie posters) this poster is still of high quality and very nice looking in my bedroom too.

Jarvis October 11, 2010 at 8:57 am

Poster arrived in days. Good quality. Looks just like the image. I’m happy with it.

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