(d) "Tseng regularly documented Haring surreptitiously drawing his white-chalk cartoon allegories on blacked-out signboards in New York subway stations; he also made photographs of the dancer Bill T Jones, naked but for patterns painted by Haring all over his body."
(i) Keith Haring
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Keith_Haring
(1958-1990; died of AIDS)
(ii) “Haring surreptitiously drawing his white-chalk cartoon allegories on blacked-out signboards in New York subway stations”
(A) Obviously illegally--trespass and all that.
(B) Keith Haring: Subway Chalk Drawing's [sic: should be 'Drawings']. Guy Hepner (contemporary arts dealers), Jan 30, 2013.
www.guyhepner.com/keith-haring-subway-chalk-drawings/
(iii)
(A) “he [Tseng] also made photographs of the dancer Bill T Jones, naked but for patterns painted by Haring all over his body”
Go to images.google.com with the terms (Haring Tseng Bill T Jones)--no quotation marks.
(B) Bill T Jones
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bill_T._Jones
(1952- ; co-founder of the Bill T Jones/Arnie Zane Dance Company [Arnie Zane: a man (1948-1988; died of AIDS; Arnie most likely contracted from “Arnold”)])
(e) "He was blessed with a larky spirit. In 1980, wearing his Mao suit, he crashed a $300-per-ticket reception for an exhibition of Qing dynasty costumes at the Metropolitan Museum of Art. An assistant shot him posing with celebrities like Paloma Picasso, Henry Kissinger and Yves Saint Laurent, who either took him for a visiting Chinese dignitary or didn’t know what to make of him. (He sported a seemingly official but uninformative name tag in a plastic envelope pinned to his chest, with a head shot of himself and the words 'Visitor/Visiteur' stamped on it.)"
(i)
(A) larky (adj): "given to or ready for larking"
www.merriam-webster.com/dictionary/lark
(B) lark (vi; probably alteration of lake to frolic; First Known Use 1813): "to engage in harmless fun or mischief —often used with about"
www.merriam-webster.com/dictionary/lark
(ii) French English dictionary
visiteur (noun masculine; visiter to visit + -eur): "visitor"
en.wiktionary.org/wiki/visiteur
(f) "For that project ['Moral Majority' (1981)], Tseng wore a seersucker suit, the preppy uniform of a young Republican."
(i) Yo can go to Wikipe4dia or images.google.com to see what seersucker cloths look like.
(ii)
(A) seersucker (n): “1722, from Hindi sirsakar, East Indian corruption of Persian shir o shakkar ‘striped cloth,’ literally ‘milk and sugar,’ a reference to the alternately smooth and puckered surfaces of the stripes. From Persian shir (cognate with Sanskrit ksiram ‘milk’) + shakar (cognate with Pali sakkhara, Sanskrit sarkara ‘gravel, grit, sugar;’ see sugar (n))
www.etymonline.com/index.php?term=seersucker
(B) sugar (n): “late 13c., sugre, from Old French sucre "sugar" (12c.), from Medieval Latin succarum, from Arabic sukkar, from Persian shakar, from Sanskrit sharkara ‘ground or candied sugar,’ originally ‘grit, gravel’ (cognate with Greek kroke ‘pebble’). The Arabic word also was borrowed in Italian (zucchero), Spanish (azucar, with the Arabic article), and German (Old High German zucura, German Zucker), and its forms are represented in most European languages (such as Serbian cukar, Polish cukier, Russian sakhar)"
www.etymonline.com/index.php?term=sugar
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