In it, art historian Paul Hayes Tucker explores Noland's history as a soldier in the United States Army and his subsequent re-entry into a burgeoning American consumer society, portraying his art
as inextricable from atomic age America.
Rather than attempting a definitive history, the publication posits an alternative approach to the myriad questions and debates associated with representation, presenting its technological history
as inextricable from the social history of media, and staging this through the complex and multivalent relationship between the photographic image and the body, whether it be the body of the viewer, or that of the depicted.
Not exact matches
Thus, the social sciences, like the natural sciences, show that man's nature and nurture in their relational
as in their universal aspects, must be conceived with due regard for the
inextricable interdependence of physical, mental, and spiritual factors.
Nothing has so clearly documented the
inextricable relation of method and content
as has the recent work on the parables by Ernst Fuchs, Amos Wilder, and Robert Funk.
As these pictures show, the snap of the ball is the signal for what often appears to be
inextricable confusion, although to the gladiators locked in man - to - man struggle there is a certain order and sense to the conflict.
And I also recognize that you don't have to be a political conservative to object to these incidents; they've also been used
as fodder for arguing against GMOs (contained in those Ritz crackers) and against the
inextricable links between agribusiness and the federal school meals program, among other issues often raised by the political left.
But what makes Andy unique amongst his peers isn't so much his pro-plant bias
as it is his passion for calling out the
inextricable link between giant food corporations and how we innately come to think and feel about the foods we (often unconsciously choose to) eat.
Labour's David Lammy says the relationship between the UK and the Caribbean is «
inextricable» and his parents arrived
as British citizens.
I encourage everyone to pick up a copy of the new book «Food
as Medicine,» where herbalist Todd Caldecott offers a straightforward exploration of ``... the
inextricable bond between food, life and each other.»
Slowly but surely, she learns to accept that
as fact and realizes that what she loves about him is
inextricable from his work.»
The film has been likened — and regarded
as a precursor — to rock videos for how
inextricable its sound and image are, a by - product of Leone playing Morricone's ready - made compositions on set.
Terence Davies's A Quiet Passion is one such rarity, refusing to over-account for the sensitivities or attention spans of today's audiences in treating Emily Dickinson
as a living, breathing human
inextricable from her everyday reality.
Kingsley's roundhouse climactic speech reveals evil
as a beast not easily classified and explained, but it's not until the epilogue that Polanski unleashes his film's final, and most powerful, punch — a supple crane shot inside a concert hall that both evokes the
inextricable web of deceit, violence, and shame that binds Death and the Maiden's three crippled characters, and stands
as a superlative evocation of how man's crimes against his fellow man are frequently hidden beneath a façade of everyday decorum.
Yet, I can't help but wonder at the impulse to «promote diversity,»
as if it isn't already an
inextricable feature of our world.
The
inextricable link between the learning environment and the performance of those within it,
as embodied in «The Third Teacher» concept attributed to the Reggio Emilia ethos, is now well documented, with support from the likes of Professor Peter Barrett and the Clever Classrooms report of the HEAD project.
Maisie's investigation leads her from the countryside of rural Hampshire to the web of wartime opportunism exploited by one of the London underworld's most powerful men, in a case that serves
as a reminder of the
inextricable link between money and war.
King's advice is grounded in his vivid memories from childhood through his emergence
as a writer, from his struggling early career to his widely reported, near - fatal accident in 1999 — and how the
inextricable link between writing and living spurred his recovery.
His ending is unsatisfactory because the problems he pinpoints are so intractable, so —
as he demonstrates —
inextricable from American history, that their solution is necessarily utopian and, so, very unlikely.
It is because of this
inextricable link between human and animal welfare and because Oklahoma communities view themselves
as rooted in proud traditions of cooperation and commitment — and moral and ethical standards — that the Kirkpatrick Foundation hopes that governments, businesses, organizations, and individuals will see the merits of The Oklahoma Animal Study
as well
as the Kirkpatrick Foundation's approach to research, convene, honor, promote, and fund efforts to improve the lives of Oklahoma animals and the people who care for them.
Advancing the fields of painting, photography, performance, and more, Rauschenberg's work is
inextricable from the history of art
as a whole.
It is in this sentiment,
as well
as possibly for the first time telling Ross» side of the story, that the recently acquired archive of material at Visual AIDS is generative for Felix Gonzalez - Torres» body of work, rounding out a biography that is
inextricable from the art.
Josephine Meckseper, born in Germany, uses commercial forms of presentation such
as vitrines, window displays, and magazines, to demonstrate
inextricable influences of consumer culture on society.
Migration and Identity, a new exhibition of textile and installation artwork by TeaYoun Kim - Kassor explores the
inextricable connection between â $ œWho am I?â $ and â $ œWhere am I?â $ that defines us
as individuals.
Ryan Gander's show at Lisson takes
as its theme the notion of art and artist becoming
inextricable, the moment in which an artist no longer quite knows how to separate their work from their life.
Likewise, in its diverse references and
inextricable dichotomies, Ofili's work functions
as a magnet for viewers» own meanings, ideas, or arguments and encourages them to disagree freely, even with themselves.
For more than 40 years, the Los Angeles artist Allan Sekula, who passed away in 2013, approached photographic documentation
as a mode of conceptualism, never losing sight of the
inextricable relations among the medium's aesthetic, cultural and theoretical underpinnings.
Credit risk is
inextricable from societal factors of class and race, ultimately raising questions about debt
as an instrument of structural injustice.
But,
as with Manet, Mazur's inconsistency is
inextricable from his pictorial ambition.
As the figure is simultaneously well - defined through this painting style and made opaque by its treatment, the characters become
inextricable from decoration or masquerade.
For centuries, painters had used these conventions
as fundamental structuring elements of their pictures,
inextricable from the order underlying their arrangements of spaces, bodies and things.
«Today's agreement which recognises the status of the river
as Te Awa Tupua (an integrated, living whole) and the
inextricable relationship of iwi with the river is a major step towards the resolution of the historical grievances of Whanganui iwi and is important nationally,» says New Zealand's Minister for Treaty for Waitangi Negotiations, Christopher Finlayson.
It argues that mass claims arbitration
as construed in Abaclat can not satisfy fundamental arbitration principles because it fails to observe the
inextricable link between the parties» consent, representative procedure, and representative relief.