Sentences with phrase «finding urban nature»

Not exact matches

Here we find the stories of the Jungshindae (the «comfort women»), the war widows, and the workers, peasants and urban poor, exposing the nature of the political powers in the modern Korea.
Unexpectedly, they found a significant size difference between urban and rural trees, even after accounting for factors such as temperature and nutrient levels, they report in the 10 July issue of Nature.
Without areas of wilderness we have nothing to act as a contrast to the barren urban wastelands most of us find ourselves in, and finally, without nature, we would lose the richness of human experience that is just as much a part of our heritage as our genes.
By comparing mercury observations at 50 forested, marine, and urban monitoring stations, the study published in Nature Geoscience (March 26, 2018) finds that vegetation uptake of mercury is important at the global scale.
Researchers found that the individuals who viewed the nature scenes showed faster physical recovery from the effects of stress than the subjects who viewed urban scenes.
Read our article «Finding Nature in the Big Apple» on the importance of spending time in nature when you live in an urban enviroNature in the Big Apple» on the importance of spending time in nature when you live in an urban environature when you live in an urban environment.
She hopes to inspire other urban and suburban dwellers on how to use nature to find balance in today's work - first culture.
With Table Mountain and the Cape of Good Hope both in close proximity, nature is never far away, but within the city itself, you'll find plenty of urban charm, such as a world - class restaurant scene, fashionable shops, and modern art galleries, including the newly opened Zeitz Museum of Contemporary Art Africa.
Urban cites his influence for the exhibition as the mass - produced images we find of nature: in posters, on desktops, and online.
While I have lived in New York City (with its infamous pigeons), for my entire life, my home in Brooklyn offers a slice of nature rarely found in an urban environment.
Since 1993, when Goldsworthy presented his first solo exhibition in New York City, the artist has sought to find a way to convey the nature in urban environments.
Filming and narrating the film herself, Varda travelled around France, profiling gleaners, from those who follow the country harvests through to urban scavengers, and an artist who finds objects and transforms them into sculpture, and Varda herself, who ponders the gleaning nature of digital filmmaking.
His use of factory - made moving blankets, for example, frequently found in galleries and museums during installation project the idea of transit and relates to the nomadic nature of urban living.
Filming with a hand - held camera and narrating the film herself, Varda travelled around France, profiling gleaners, from those who follow the country harvests, through to urban scavengers, such as the bricoleur artist who finds objects and transforms them into sculpture, and Varda herself, who ponders the gleaning nature of digital filmmaking.
Leonardo Drew is known for his sculptures and installations of found natural and manmade materials that evoke urban living, humanity's relationship with nature, African - American society and other references.
Together with the painter Djoko Mazalic he founded the art association called «The Circle» that had strong urban aesthetics of nature.
Attracted to nature, she finds cemeteries a quiet place to commune and escape from the urban noise and traffic in her Brooklyn neighborhood.
I found this tension was just what I needed to convey the otherworldly feeling I encountered in real life when I observed how nature adapts and mutates to accommodate encounters with the ever - encroaching urban environment.»
A team of researchers, including Phil Jones at the Climactic Research Unit at Britain's University of East Anglia and Wei - Chyung Wang, a climatologist at the State University of New York (SUNY)- Albany, published a paper in Nature in 1990 that examined this question using data that included readings from multiple Chinese meteorological stations and found the urban heat bias to be minimal.
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