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<p>[QUOTE="Bronwen, post: 627648, member: 5833"]<a href="https://openagenda.com/jep-2016-nord-pas-de-calais-picardie/events/maurice-le-poitevin-un-artiste-dans-la-bataille-de-la-somme?lang=en" target="_blank" class="externalLink ProxyLink" data-proxy-href="https://openagenda.com/jep-2016-nord-pas-de-calais-picardie/events/maurice-le-poitevin-un-artiste-dans-la-bataille-de-la-somme?lang=en" rel="nofollow">https://openagenda.com/jep-2016-nord-pas-de-calais-picardie/events/maurice-le-poitevin-un-artiste-dans-la-bataille-de-la-somme?lang=en</a></p><p><br /></p><p>And that's the English! IM Translator does this with it:</p><p><br /></p><p>Maurice Le Poitevin, stretcher bearer in the 329th RI, the Historial not only keeps his war diary detailing his career in the concern to report the daily, but also a series of some 120 drawings (charcoal, gouache, ink .... ) captioned and dated. The Poitevin continues, through the battles leading from Artois to Aisne, to sketch live scenes of the life of the front, going to the striking representations of the violence of the battlefield and the death. A chronology of his work will take into account his experience of military service (1907-1911) until the difficult period of the post-war period marked by the production of film sets. He who speaks of 'learning the warrior' calls his war diary 'A la traine ...', thus revealing in a few words the quality and intensity of his frank and bold language. The cross analysis between the study of the corpus of drawings and that of the manuscript reveals a testimony of a rich intensity, far from conventions.[/QUOTE]</p><p><br /></p>
[QUOTE="Bronwen, post: 627648, member: 5833"][URL]https://openagenda.com/jep-2016-nord-pas-de-calais-picardie/events/maurice-le-poitevin-un-artiste-dans-la-bataille-de-la-somme?lang=en[/URL] And that's the English! IM Translator does this with it: Maurice Le Poitevin, stretcher bearer in the 329th RI, the Historial not only keeps his war diary detailing his career in the concern to report the daily, but also a series of some 120 drawings (charcoal, gouache, ink .... ) captioned and dated. The Poitevin continues, through the battles leading from Artois to Aisne, to sketch live scenes of the life of the front, going to the striking representations of the violence of the battlefield and the death. A chronology of his work will take into account his experience of military service (1907-1911) until the difficult period of the post-war period marked by the production of film sets. He who speaks of 'learning the warrior' calls his war diary 'A la traine ...', thus revealing in a few words the quality and intensity of his frank and bold language. The cross analysis between the study of the corpus of drawings and that of the manuscript reveals a testimony of a rich intensity, far from conventions.[/QUOTE]
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