Matches in DBpedia 2016-04 for { <http://citation.dbpedia.org/hash/b9dbc5f0dff96594f0973560a9797a206fabeb9a1b777efbcde9d609d079340d> ?p ?o }
Showing triples 1 to 7 of
7
with 100 triples per page.
- b9dbc5f0dff96594f0973560a9797a206fabeb9a1b777efbcde9d609d079340d accessdate "2015-07-03".
- b9dbc5f0dff96594f0973560a9797a206fabeb9a1b777efbcde9d609d079340d date "1992-05-17".
- b9dbc5f0dff96594f0973560a9797a206fabeb9a1b777efbcde9d609d079340d first1 "ALICE".
- b9dbc5f0dff96594f0973560a9797a206fabeb9a1b777efbcde9d609d079340d isCitedBy El_Jaleo.
- b9dbc5f0dff96594f0973560a9797a206fabeb9a1b777efbcde9d609d079340d last1 "THORSON".
- b9dbc5f0dff96594f0973560a9797a206fabeb9a1b777efbcde9d609d079340d publisher "The Kansas City Star".
- b9dbc5f0dff96594f0973560a9797a206fabeb9a1b777efbcde9d609d079340d title "Mysterious, seductive and a little dangerous John Singer Sargent's superb `El Jaleo' defies the curse of primitivism".