About the Book
Please note that the content of this book primarily consists of articles available from Wikipedia or other free sources online. Pages: 35. Chapters: Daniel-Henry Kahnweiler, Jean Ferre, Frank Popper, Pierre-Jean Mariette, Giovanni Lista, Andre Grabar, Avigdor Arikha, Pierre de Nolhac, Paul Ardenne, Dominique Moulon, Quatremere de Quincy, Etienne Moreau-Nelaton, Claude Roger-Marx, Julien-David Le Roy, Emile Male, Michel Sanouillet, Charles Chipiez, Gabriel Badea-Paun, Rose Valland, Pierre Restany, Rene Huyghe, Charles Othon Frederic Jean-Baptiste de Clarac, Andrei Nakov, Alexis-Francois Rio, Alfred Louis Delattre, Michel Poivert, Adolphe Napoleon Didron, Andre Chastel, Jean Baptiste Gustave Planche, Alain Pasquier, Gaston Lavalley, Paul-Louis Roubert, Jean-Francois Chevrier, Louis Courajod, Jean-Michel Thierry, Georges Ribemont-Dessaignes, Erich Klossowski, Marc Elder, Henri Focillon, Michel Laclotte, Jean Leymarie, Elie Faure, Auguste Choisy, Edmond Pottier, Antoine Schnapper, Loys Delteil, Wilhelm Frohner, Francois Leperlier, Maurice Rheims, Philippe Stern, Eugene Muntz, Jean-Louis Vaudoyer, Marie-Madeleine Gauthier, Jacques Thuillier, Louis Gillet, Charles Picard, Francoise Henry, Charles-Philippe de Chennevieres-Pointel, Jean-Claude Lebensztejn, Maurice Fenaille. Excerpt: Jean Ferre (b. 29 May 1929, Saint-Pierre-les-Eglises, now part of Chauvigny, Vienne, d. 10 October 2006, Saint-Germain-en-Laye) was a French art historian and far-right journalist. He was also the founder of the Paris-based Radio Courtoisie in 1987. From 1942 Ferre performed his secondary stodies at the College Saint-Stanislas in Poitiers, a Jesuit school. After his baccalaureate, he undertook mathelem, then studied in the Ecole speciale de mecanique et d'electricite. He did not finish his studies. Towards the end of 1945, he constructed a short-wave transceiver with double frequency change and lamps. This taste for radio was to last his whole life. In 1949, Ferre became an amateur radio lic...