Name Stories of Shoes
Edgar Allan Poe (January 19, 1809 - October 7, 1849) was an American poet, author, editor and literary critic. He wrote mostly poetry and short stories. It is especially known for its mystery and macabre stories. In addition to being one of the important figures of the Romanticism movement in the USA and American literature, he is also considered one of the first writers of short stories in his country. While he is generally considered the inventor of the detective genre, he is also claimed to have contributed to the emerging science fiction genre. The life and career of Poe, the first well-known American writer who tried to survive solely through his writings, passed through economic difficulties.
Poe and his works not only had an impact on literature around the world, but also had an impact on cosmology and cryptography outside of literature. Poe and his works are frequently encountered in all areas of literature, music, film, television and popular culture. Some of the houses he lived in were turned into museums. The Mystery Writers of America annually awards the Edgar Award to outstanding works of mystery literature.
Ida Lupino, (February 4, 1918 – August 3, 1995) was an English-born American film actress, director and screenwriter. Lupino, whose birth date is stated as 1914 in some sources, acted in 104 films, directed 41 films, produced some films and wrote 8 films as a screenwriter, from the 1930s to the 1970s, when she worked actively in cinema and television. Apart from these, he contributed his voice to 7 films and sang and played the piano in these films.
Ida Lupino, known as the pioneer of female filmmakers, was one of the first female directors accepted by the Directors Guild.
It is an ancient city located in Behramkale Village, approximately 17 km south of Çanakkale's Ayvacık district.
It was founded on the summit and slopes of a volcanic hill at the southern end of the region called Troas in ancient times, opposite the island of Lesbos. The region, which has been under Lydian, Persian, Pergamon and Roman rule throughout history, was abandoned in the Middle Ages; It was discovered by the young American architect Francis H. Bacon during the excavations carried out by the American Institute of Archaeology in 1880-1883.
It is important for the history of philosophy because Aristotle, one of the great thinkers of the Ancient Age, lived in this city for three years and founded a philosophy school.
The most striking place of this city, which was founded in 900 BC, is the Doric Temple of Athena built at the top. The city also has a large amphitheater.
Today, the city of Behramkale, at the foothills and slopes of the mountain where the city is located, is still active.
Agnès
Asıl ismiyle Arlette Varda, Agnès Varda (30 Mayıs 1928; Belçika - 29 Mart 2019; Paris, Fransa), Fransız fotoğrafçı ve sinemacı. "Yeni Dalga akımının büyükannesi" diye de anılır. Özellikle La Pointe Courte, Cléo de 5 à 7 (5'ten 7'ye Cléo), Çatısız Kuralsız ve Les Glaneurs et la glaneuse (Toplayıcılar) filmleriyle tanınır. Agnès Varda Fransa’daki feminist politikaların içinde de etkin olarak yer almıştır.
Anadolu’dan göçmüş Yunan baba ve Fransız anneden Brüksel’de doğdu. Çocukluğunun ilk yıllarını Belçika'da geçirdikten sonra önce Sete'ye, daha sonra da Paris'e gitti. Jean Vilar yönetimindeki Théâtre national populaire ’de çalışmaya ve fotoğrafla ilgilenmeye başladı. Daha sonra evleneceği yönetmen Jacques Demy ile tanıştı.
1961’de ikinci uzun metrajlı filmi olan ve ölümcül hastalığı olan bir şarkıcının iki saatini anlatan Cléo de 5 à 7 (5’ten 7’ye Cleo ) çekti. 60'lı yıllar boyunca, Yeni Dalga içinde değerlendirilen sayısız film yaptı.
In 1985, he received the Golden Lion award at the Venice Film Festival with the film Sans toit ni loi, starring young actress Sandrine Bonnaire.
After the death of her husband Jacques Demy in 1990, she made three films in his memory: Jacquot de Nantes (Jacquot of Nantes), a fiction, and two documentaries; Les demoiselles ont eu 25 ans et L'univers de Jacques Demy.
The documentary he shot in 1999, les Glaneurs et la glaneuse (The Gatherers), became one of the important films of his career. His extensive tour around the concept of foraging with a digital camera revealed his sensitive and responsible identity. The film was appreciated by both critics and audiences. Two years later, the film's sequel came: Two Years Later.
In 2022, he won the French Academy's René Clair award.
He took part in the feature competition jury at the Cannes Film Festival in 2005.
Mathieu Demy, her son from her marriage with Jacques Demy, is one of the young actors of French cinema.
Meriç Sümen, one of the first Turkish ballerinas and choreographer.
She danced as a prima ballerina in many works such as Giselle, Swan Lake, The Nutcracker, Romeo and Juliet, Sleeping Beauty, Woman with Camellias, Spoiled Girl in Turkey and as a guest artist on many stages of the world, and played a role in the recognition of Turkish Ballet in the world.
He performed his work Swan Lake in more than forty countries; In 1972, 1979, and 1982, she appeared on stage as Giselle at the historical Bolshoi Theater in Moscow.
After her active ballet career ended, Sümen served as the General Manager of the State Opera and Ballet between 2005 and 2007, and is the first ballet artist and the first woman to hold this position.
Berthe Marie Pauline Morisot was a French painter and a member of the painter circle in Paris known for the Impressionism movement.
In 1864, Morisot's works were exhibited for the first time at the highly prestigious Salon de Paris. Government-sponsored and judged by Academics, the Paris Salon was the official annual exhibition of the Académie des beaux-arts (Academy of Fine Arts) in Paris. His works were selected to be exhibited at the Paris Salon for six more consecutive years until 1874.
In 1874, his works were exhibited in the first of his own exhibitions at the studio of the photographer Nadar, whose works included the works of the impressionist painters Paul Cézanne, Edgar Degas, Claude Monet, Camille Pissarro, Pierre-Auguste Renoir and Alfred Sisley, who were "rejected" at the Paris Salon. Morisot participated in all but one of the following eight Impressionist exhibitions between 1874 and 1886.
By marrying Édouard Manet's brother, Eugène Manet, she also became a relative of her colleague.
She was described by Gustave Geffroy in 1894 as one of the "three great women" of impressionism, along with Marie Bracquemond and Mary Cassatt.
Phoebe Buffay is the character played by Lisa Kudrow in the TV series Friends, which aired between 1994 and 2004.
She is Monica's former roommate. She is a professional masseuse and does amateur music. He has a twin sister named Ursula Buffay.
Phoebe writes songs with different and funny lyrics, and her most popular song, "Smelly Cat", became the soundtrack for a cat litter commercial. When Joey forgets about the dates he and Phoebe were going to set up for each other, Mike meets Hannigan and introduces him to Phoebe. In the final season, Mike and Phoebe get married.
Tomris
Known for its beauty and courage, Tomris was born in B.C. She is the first Turkish female ruler who lived in the 6th century. Tomris Hatun, whose name means 'iron', is a female figure who has known how to ride horses since her childhood and is a master of sword and archery.
She is a Saka queen who has an important place in world history and is the granddaughter of the Turkish ruler Alp Er Tunga.
Tomris Hatun, who went through difficult times, lost her son in the war, but by not giving up her cause, she became a power that managed to bring the end of the Persian Empire and ruled over a wide geography.
We wanted to name our boot model after a strong woman and Tomris was one of the best choices.
Georges Prosper Remi, better known as Hergé (22 May 1907 - 3 March 1983; Brussels), was a Belgian illustrator. He is the creator of the comic book character Tintin.
Georges Rémi, who worked as a designer starting from 1920, used the initials of his name, G.R., as his signature in his paintings. In 1924, bored with his signature, he reversed the letters, meaning "R.G." did. This was pronounced "Erje" in French, meaning "Hergé" as written. After that, he started to use this pseudonym in his works and became known around the world under this name.
Tintin, his dog Milu and his friends, who are especially famous in Belgium and France, are known all over the world. The Adventures of Tintin (Les Aventures de Tintin), first drawn by Herge in 1929, has been translated into 50 different languages so far, and these adventures have been printed more than 200 million times worldwide.
According to UNESCO's Index Translationum (List of authors whose works have been translated into other languages), Hergé ranks ninth among the authors whose works have been translated from French into other languages.
Georges Rémi died in 1983, at the age of 77, during Tintin's 24th adventure.
Fikret Muallâ Saygı, Turkish painter. Due to his turbulent and bohemian lifestyle, not only his art but also his life went down in the history of painting as a mythology.
Fikret Mualla painted to be happy and forget everything. For this reason, he was not influenced by various movements in the art world, he used his intuition while painting and created his own style. He transferred his own feelings to his works and painted paintings full of joy of life.
Mualla, who loves to paint cities, included the people, streets, cafes, circuses, brothels and fishermen of Istanbul and Paris in his paintings. It is known that the artist, who likes to play with colors, was greatly influenced by Henri Matisse's use of color.
He usually painted his paintings with gouache on colored background papers. He frequently used watercolor and pastel materials in his paintings. It is known that Fikret Mualla, who took some time to become known in the Paris art scene, praised Picasso's works, even bought one of his paintings, gave him one of his own works as a gift, and Fikret Muala sold the painting given by Picasso for a raki coin.
Fikret Mualla's main works include Sitting Men, Café, French Workers in a Café in Marseille, Golden Horn and Suleymaniye, A Street in Paris, The Balloon Man and the Fisherman.
His paintings, which were auctioned in Paris after his death, were purchased by the Turkish state and a Fikret Mualla Hall was created in the Ankara Painting and Sculpture Museum. In 1976, an exhibition was held in his name in Ankara with 118 paintings compiled from his friends, relatives and various collections. Many of his works are in private collections today.
Today, there is an association in Paris called the Fikret Mualla Friends Association. This association has undertaken the responsibility of researching the originality of Fikret Mualla's paintings and introducing the painter.
Rıfat Ilgaz, full name Mehmet Rıfat Ilgaz, is a Turkish poet, novelist and short story writer.
He became especially known for his novel Hababam Class. He maintained a socialist line both in his writings and in his personal life. His magazine work, which he continued during Turkey's most turbulent political periods, caused him to spend time in courthouse corridors and prisons, like many writers of the same period. In his very productive literary career, he wrote works in many different fields, from poetry to humorous stories, from novels to children's books.
His work Blackout Nights, which was once confiscated, was included in the '100 Essential Works' list in 2004.