‘Arabesque,” for anyone familiar with ballet, immediately denotes a dancer extending one leg behind and stretching the opposite arm forward, to create a suave, scrolling curve in the air. That the ...
Sign up for the Gazette's morning newsletter and get essential news each day. Sign up For much of the last 40 years, there has been frequent discussion about the deep ...
WILLIAMSTOWN — Arabesque — the swirling, free-flowing, calligraphic line without beginning or end — came into its own as an ornamental design motif in the 1800s after centuries of being confined in ...