The National Kennel Club American pit bull terrier standard is more restrictive,
accepting most colors and patterns with the exceptions of shades of gray and blue coloration and the merle coat pattern.
Not exact matches
Should we
accept that America's public education is the Titanic, and we need to save all that we can, while
accepting that this will leave out many,
most especially our low - income students, English - language learners, and students of
color?
Commenting on the small differences in satisfaction levels among parents with children in the charter and chosen district sectors, Paul E. Peterson, professor of government and director of the Program on Education Policy and Governance at Harvard Kennedy School, notes that «chosen district schools serve a smaller percentage of students of
color than charters do, and they are more likely to use examinations as entry requirements, while
most charter schools must
accept all applicants or use a lottery to select among them.»
While the red Shiba Inu coat
color is the
most popular, other
accepted colors are black and tan and red sesame.
The American Kennel Club breed standard
accepts most of these
colors, though strong, deep
colors are preferable.
However, cream is the
most controversial
color of Shiba Inu as this
color is not
accepted as a standard in some countries.
During the Minimalist movement, artists weren't interested in
color or even painting for the
most part; MacConnel's art just wasn't
accepted as serious.
In
accepting art that is reduced to
color, line, and form, he argued, we are able to appreciate «many kinds of old art and the arts of distant peoples — primitive, historic, colonial, Asiatic and African, as well as European — arts which had not been accessible in spirit before because it was thought that true art had to show a degree of conformity to nature and of mastery of representation which had developed for the
most part in the West.»
I don't think
accepting beautiful
color makes the work gendered female, but maybe there are some things I allow in my work that
most male artists would not.