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	<title>Comments on: Lee Miller at the Jeu De Paume &#8211; What A Life!</title>
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	<description>The first stop in your photographic life.</description>
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		<title>By: DaniV</title>
		<link>http://www.photoinduced.com/1156/lee-miller-at-the-jeu-de-paume-what-a-life/comment-page-1/#comment-242002</link>
		<dc:creator>DaniV</dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Wed, 12 Nov 2008 13:04:54 +0000</pubDate>
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		<description><![CDATA[This morning there was a private viewing of the show, guided with a sense of humor by her charming son Tony Penrose (lovely surprise!) and the curator, Mark Haworth-Booth.  For me, the highlights of the show were getting to read the full articles she wrote for Brogue (she became quite the writer during the war, and she holds nothing back in her strong and tortured feelings about the Germans), and the film at the end, in which we get to see many photos of her, as yet unpublished.  I was surprised that you described her as mostly unknown.  But perhaps itâ€™s among female anglophones in Paris, photogs and non, that her name and life are so well-known, a person from whom we channel courage.]]></description>
		<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>This morning there was a private viewing of the show, guided with a sense of humor by her charming son Tony Penrose (lovely surprise!) and the curator, Mark Haworth-Booth.  For me, the highlights of the show were getting to read the full articles she wrote for Brogue (she became quite the writer during the war, and she holds nothing back in her strong and tortured feelings about the Germans), and the film at the end, in which we get to see many photos of her, as yet unpublished.  I was surprised that you described her as mostly unknown.  But perhaps itâ€™s among female anglophones in Paris, photogs and non, that her name and life are so well-known, a person from whom we channel courage.</p>
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