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Mata Hari #2 art by Ariela Kristantina and Pat Masioni Ariela Kristantina continues to provide beautiful artwork, wavering between grounded pseudo-realism and dreamlike scenes of Mata Hari showing ...
Meet the fearless women who played the ultimate game of spies. Secrets, danger, and daring missions? These ladies have all ...
Pat Masioni 's color art compliments with its own subtle choices and balancing. Mata Hari #3 focuses its narrative, but the reluctance to clarify certain aspects of the story is beginning to ...
In the Belle Epoque period (1871 — 1914), in which French economy, culture and art were flourishing, came in Mata Hari, an unknown dancer who went on to stun the high society of Paris with her ...
The plot goes at a snail's pace throughout 165 minutes of running time, portraying Mata Hari's romance from falling in love with French pilot officer Armand by the Seine River to her life-risking ...
At Mata Hari’s two-day military trial in July 1917, the French judges heard a grossly distorted record, Schirmann says. She had done nothing for France and betrayed its secrets to the Germans ...
Giant black-and-white photos of Mata Hari wearing her barely-there, bejewelled costumes hang on the walls of the Fries Museum in northern Leeuwarden, the town where she was born as Margaretha ...
Encompassing irreverence and fun, Gottelier is back with the unlikely pairing of canvas and the pinball machine. The ‘remote control painting’ is a prototype fo ...
But in 1903 aged 27, she fled after a nasty divorce to Paris, where, penniless, she became a striptease dancer, taking the name "Mata Hari", Indonesian for "Eye of the Day".