Sentences with phrase «as points of departure»

As points of departure for these individual experimental arrangements, Germann uses characters from history such as Napoleon or motifs from myth and fantasy such as lycanthropy (from the Greek lukos, «wolf,» and anthropos, «man»: the werewolf motif), which he subjects to a revisionary rewriting, interweaving factual and fictional aspects.
About her process, Newman has said, «My paintings often take specific qualities of particular places as points of departure, but I try to approach the image without preconceived ideas and to discover forms through improvisation.»
Baziotes adopted the Surrealists» investment in fantasy and the principle of automatism as points of departure for his compositions.
Works in the exhibition (including pieces by Christi Belcourt, Maria Hupfield, Cheryl L'Hirondelle, Isaac Murdoch, and Esther Neff) will serve as points of departure for Wednesday's conversation between three Indigenous women — Columbia University professor Audra Simpson, Columbia PhD candidate Crystal Migwans, and Tarah Hogue, a senior curatorial fellow in Indigenous art at the Vancouver Art Gallery.
The exhibition forefronts the challenges of historicizing elusive artworks by presenting works that take photographic and video documentation and human memory as points of departure and reactivating, rearticulating, and witnessing the interventions and works through the lens of the contemporary moment.
Korean - born, New York - based Jinkee Choi takes ordinary objects - toothpaste tubes, packaging, trash - as points of departure for an exploration of what he calls «the Unconsciousness World.»
Their few spills served as points of departure, so that the painterly commemoration is both indexical and aesthetic.
The project takes William Morris» eponymous 1884 text on the re-imagining of the factory, and Colin Ward's response in The Factory We Never Had (1994), as points of departure for reflexively examining contemporary sites of production, education and social space, and the intersections between industry and leisure, performance and congregation.
Having trained in the conservation of Japanese decorative arts, Lorenz continues to employ traditional lacquering and gilding techniques as points of departure in her studio practice.
The artists in this exhibition similarly adopt commonplace items and established images as their points of departure.
The thematic elements of race, class, social stratification, and isolation serve as points of departure where the limited resources of the body give way to the limitless resources of the spirit.
Matter, material and materiality have acted both as points of departure and subjects of artistic production since the 1960s.
The sculptures that serve as points of departure, Campers, and the painting Girl on a Bicycle feature styles that could be old or new.
Using his diaries as points of departure, his complex process often involves incorporating newspaper clippings, dried leaves, feathers, insects, old sepia - toned photos, photographs of women, quotes, and all sorts of found objects, in addition to working with ink and paint.
In this series, Quaytman examines the complex terrain between text and image using Spicer's poetry and photographs from SFMOMA's collection as points of departure.
The exhibition forefronts the challenges of historicizing elusive artworks by presenting works that take photographic and video documentation and human memory as points of departure, reactivating, rearticulating and witnessing the interventions and works through the lens of the contemporary moment.
From the early 1950s on, Frankenthaler used Old and Modern Master paintings that she admired as points of departure.
However, artists actually executed these works — as well as biblical and mythological subjects — in studios, often using drawings as points of departure.
If, she explains, a theme runs throughout, it's «contributing toward a visibility surrounding alternative, marginalized identities,» using the artists» own personal identities as points of departure.
The trees, milkweed, haystacks, and brackish river were rife with activity, and served as points of departure for new works.
In her process she often focuses on several icons of borders as points of departure: the wall, the passport, and the map.
Using his diaries as points of departure, Beard's complex process often involves incorporating newspaper clippings, dried leaves, feathers, insects, old sepia - toned photos, photographs of women, quotes and various found objects in conjunction with his working with ink and paint.
The artists use as points of departure a wide spectrum of inspiration from personal, archival material to cultural myth and memory, both real and imagined.
Mixing pop culture with elements of Surrealism, French artist Pauline Curnier Jardin's theatrical films take history or myth as their points of departure and use improvisation, excessive characters and strange forms to create a «patchwork narration».
The three participants will consider, as points of departure, forms of reproduction enacted in Triple Canopy's 2014 Biennial installation, Pointing Machines.
This provision for such relative and limited autonomy is indeed a key requirement in any theory which takes the whole as primary, since without it there is no way to understand or even account for the fact that partial aspects can be found which may serve as points of departure in the development of knowledge.
With this as their point of departure, the bishops further suggest a process of negotiations to achieve three objectives: «First, it should formalize Israel's existence as a sovereign state in the eyes of the Arab states and the Palestinians; second, it should establish an independent Palestinian homeland with its sovereign status recognized by Israel; third, there must he negotiated limits to the exercise of Palestinian sovereignty so that it is clear that Israel's security is protected» (my emphasis).
He takes as his point of departure this statement: «When we serve, we devote ourselves to God, family and country.»
He takes as his point of departure some polling data that suggests a durable unwillingness to vote for a Mormon presidential candidate, a reluctance that has....
Time was when the will of God was understood as a point of departure; now, it is understood rather as a summons, a call.
Fair enough, except why then did he take as his point of departure Benedict's comments about communion of desire?
The prophet will not allow us to use faith as a point of departure for taking our journey through life or constructing our morality, ecclesiology, or politics.
Let us briefly review some representative arguments for the reality of God, not to make a critique of the arguments themselves, but to show the dualistic framework as their point of departure.
We see at once that the historical in the more concrete sense is a matter of indifference; we may suppose a degree of ignorance with respect to it, and permit this ignorance as if to annihilate one detail after the other, historically annihilating the historical; if only the Moment remains, as point of departure for the Eternal, the Paradox will be there.
Pannenberg's other christological innovation is his reintroduction of the concept of logos, which in Jesus: God and Man he replaced with the idea of revelation as the point of departure for Christology.
It is this — that none of the traditional theories has taken as its point of departure and its key an experiential analysis of the work of love.
His thoughts on the special role of agape in evolution may serve as a point of departure for developing a conceptual scheme that makes room for the origin of what is radically new in a world of regularity and order.
In fact, he takes as his point of departure their lack of knowledge, symbolized in the altar «to the unknown god.»
Thus, while you use Francis's identity as a Jesuit as a way to explain his pontificate, you simultaneously use his pontificate, in this case, Amoris Laetitia, as a point of a departure to critique the Jesuit charism.
The cosmos can now be envisioned not only as a point of departure for the spiritual journey but as fellow traveler into mystery.
Let us take as our point of departure the formulation of the ontological principle to the effect that «every explanatory fact refers to the decision and to the efficacity of an actual thing.»
Thus fidelity to our religious traditions demands that we embrace the traditional ideal of religious homelessness as the point of departure for self - transcendence.
It is the exchange between Jesus and the religious authorities on marriage (Mt 19:3 ff; Mk 10:2 ff) that Pope John Paul II takes as his point of departure.
In order to conceive of divine causation we should not take as our point of departure the crude images of transfer of power that we find in the objects of secondary (sense) perception.
This chapter takes as its point of departure and as recurring touchstones several texts of Benedetto Croce and Antonio Gramsci.
... which claims to recover in its purity the first layer of facts and ideas which served as a point of departure for the first generation of Christians.
Rather, they argue, Constantinople took a different, though similar, local baptismal creed as its point of departure for reaffirming the «faith of Nicea.»
Instead they focused upon the subjective perceptions and internal anxieties of the human person as their point of departure, which for Jaki was all very well as a second step in theological dialogue but not the first.
History It is possible that a Portuguese recipe was minimally adapted in Sri Lanka or used as a point of departure.
A translation should always take its «original» as a point of departure from which to build a whole different work of art, not as a sacred text to be faithfully respected and imitated.
a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z