Lina Viktor: Arcadia is on display through July 11 at Gallery 151 in New York City.
Lina Viktor Is the Artist Who Paints With Gold|Erin Cunningham|May 23, 2014|DAILY BEAST
On Labor Day weekend of 1999, Platt informed her mother that she was going with Vafeades to see a relative in Arcadia.
Timothy Vafeades, the Vampire Trucker, Shames the Undead|Michael Daly|December 12, 2013|DAILY BEAST
The book was Your Police, which Bratton discovered at the age of nine in the Boston Pubic Library on Arcadia Street.
Can Bill Bratton Solve De Blasio’s NYPD Dilemma?|Michael Daly|December 5, 2013|DAILY BEAST
Paradise may be unattainable, but Arcadia posits that sympathetic company is necessary to a meaningful life.
Must Read New Fiction: ‘Arcadia,’ ‘Men in Space,’ ‘The O’Briens,’ ‘Hot Pink’|Chloë Schama, Jacob Silverman, Wendy Smith, Daniel Roberts|March 23, 2012|DAILY BEAST
By the start of the third section, Bit and his parents have left Arcadia.
Must Read New Fiction: ‘Arcadia,’ ‘Men in Space,’ ‘The O’Briens,’ ‘Hot Pink’|Chloë Schama, Jacob Silverman, Wendy Smith, Daniel Roberts|March 23, 2012|DAILY BEAST
One event alone could really end this endless life of the Italian Arcadia.
Robert Browning|G. K. Chesterton
Lastly, in connexion with Sidney we may note a curious poem which appeared in the first edition of the Arcadia only.
Pastoral Poetry and Pastoral Drama|Walter W. Greg
In connection with some particular parts of Greece, especially Attica or Arcadia.
Studies on Homer and the Homeric Age, Vol. 1 of 3|W. E. Gladstone
But there is a poetic Arcadia none the less, the real Arcadia mirrored in a contemplative mind.
Soliloquies in England|George Santayana
I believe the proprietor owned three such establishments, each, in a triumph of irony, called "Arcadia."
The Blower of Bubbles|Arthur Beverley Baxter
British Dictionary definitions for Arcadia
Arcadia
/ (ɑːˈkeɪdɪə) /
noun
a department of Greece, in the central Peloponnese. Capital: Tripolis. Pop: 91 326 (2001). Area: 4367 sq km (1686 sq miles)
Also called (poetic): Arcady (ˈɑːkədɪ) the traditional idealized rural setting of Greek and Roman bucolic poetry and later in the literature of the Renaissance