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Ponytail terrace so shy that -- incredible secretly dream of -- suitcase absolutely by oneself(=alone) point at sculpture get up her courage tease let.

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Presentation on theme: "Ponytail terrace so shy that -- incredible secretly dream of -- suitcase absolutely by oneself(=alone) point at sculpture get up her courage tease let."— Presentation transcript:

1 ponytail terrace so shy that -- incredible secretly dream of -- suitcase absolutely by oneself(=alone) point at sculpture get up her courage tease let go fade away 포니테일 테라스 매우 수줍어 해서 -- 하다 믿을 수 없는 은밀하게 -- 을 꿈꾸다 여행가방 절대적으로 혼자서 가리키다 조각 용기를 내다 괴롭히다, 놀리다 해방하다, 놓아주다 사라지다, 희미해지다 Lesson 7 People and Arts

2 think to oneself lock away missing bits and pieces in place puzzled eventually 혼자말하다 비밀로 해두다 있어야 할 곳에 없는 부스러기, 잡동사니 적소에 어리둥절해 하는, 얼떨떨한 결국

3 It was a hot summer’s day in Vallauris, France. Sylvette was sitting with a few friends on the terrace in the sun. She was so shy that she always sat by herself, but she listened to every word. “Have you heard? Picasso is staying right here in Vallauris!” “It’s incredible! He’s the most famous artist in the world.” Sylvette was very interested. Secretly, she dreamed of becoming an artist. In a suitcase under her bed was a sketchbook full of her drawings. All her secrets were locked inside that suitcase -- things no one else had ever been allowed to see. Suddenly, Sylvette noticed something absolutely amazing. Right in front of her eyes, a beautiful picture appeared above the terrace wall. Why was Sylvette interested to hear about Picasso? Because she dreamed of becoming an artist.

4 “Look!” said her friends. “It’s Sylvette. Few girls have a ponytail like that.” They all ran to look. They saw a man holding the picture above his head. It was Picasso! “I saw you all from my studio, and I made a sketch,” Picasso laughed. Then, pointing at Sylvette, he said, “Come on. Why don’t you visit me and be my model?” After that day, Picasso began to draw Sylvette. All through the summer, he drew pictures and made sculptures of her. One day, Sylvette got up her courage and showed Picasso her secret sketchbook. She told him about her dream of becoming an artist. Picasso didn’t laugh or tease her. “That is good,” he said loudly. “But you have to be brave and learn to let go of your feelings. Look at me! When I am angry, I make angry paintings. When I am sad, my paintings are sad, too. And when I am happy, my paintings are full of joy. Even my dreams are in my work. There can be no secrets in one’s paintings.” What advice did Picasso give to Sylvette about painting? He advised her to be brave and learn to let go.

5 The next day, Picasso started working on a huge sculpture of Sylvette. It had a long neck and a round handbag just like hers, but the head was so strange that Sylvette didn’t think it looked like her at all. As she watched, she suddenly had a feeling that this would be the last time Picasso would use her as his model. Since the day on the terrace, she had spent little time away from him. ‘Soon it will all fade away, like the summer,’ she thought to herself. While Picasso worked, Sylvette began telling him the secrets that she had locked away and tried to forget. She talked about the time her father left her family. Sylvette kept a picture of him in her suitcase, but she had never told anyone how sad and lonely she had been since that day. Picasso looked up at her and said, “It is very hard when people leave us.” Then he smiled, saying, “But try to remember, when one door closes, another door opens.” What did Picasso mean when he said, “when one door closes, another door open.”? He meant there should be other possibilities even when the situation looks hopeless.

6 Picasso looked at her, and then jumped up. “You have given me an idea,” he said. “I knew something was missing from the sculpture... You must hold something in your hand!” Picasso began searching through bits and pieces on a table. At last he found what he wanted. “In her hand,” Picasso announced, “Sylvette holds... a key!” He pushed a big iron key into the hand of the sculpture. Sylvette looked puzzled. “She has a key because she has so many secrets locked away.” Picasso fixed the key in place. “But she also has a key... listen, Sylvette... to open a new door!” “Look! It is finished ― The Girl with a Key. Now, Sylvette, I would like to give you a present. You may choose any of my paintings you like. Maybe it will help to open a door for you.” She chose the very first drawing Picasso had drawn of her. Hope, possibililty, dream What do you think the meaning of the key in “The Girl with a Key” is?

7 After that summer, Sylvette began to paint as bravely as Picasso had taught her to. When the picture Picasso had given to her was sold, she was able to buy a real studio: a place where her dream of becoming an artist could come true. Running up the stairs, Sylvette turned the key ― and opened the door.... Eventually, Sylvette David became a well-known artist herself. He advised her to be brave and helped her realize her dream of becoming an artist. What influence do you think Picasso had on Sylvette’s life?.

8 1.Something absolutely amazing 이 의미하는 것은 ? 2.Picasso 가 Sylvette 에게 제안한 것은 ? 3. 본문 work 와 같은 의미로 쓰인 것은 ? 4.Why did Sylvette think the sculpture looked different from her? 5.Whose picture did Sylvette keep in her suitcase? 6. 본문 may 와 의미가 같은 것은 ? 7.What did Sylvette become at last? 8. 다음 중 나머지 셋과 성격이 다른 하나는 ? 1)I go to work five days a week. 2)The woman is sketching a work of art. 1)It’s very cloudy, so it may rain this afternoon. 2)May I use your laptop computer until one o’clock? 1)He did it himself. 2)She found herself caught in the trap. 3)You yourself should do it right now 4)I solved the problem myself.


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