Sentences with phrase «brilliantly original work»

The animation company's recent output has been uneven, with far too much emphasis on sequels over the brilliantly original work that made their name.

Not exact matches

100 g CHOC Chick Raw Cacao Butter 30 g CHOC Chick Raw Cacao Powder (6 - 7 tablespoons) 2 - 3 tbsp CHOC Chick Agave Syrup or Sweet Freedom Original 25 g butter (for a completely raw version, there really isn't any need to add this butter, so don't add if you are vegan) 5 tsp rum (or water) 4 tbsp single cream (vegan creams work brilliantly!)
«After the tremendous reception by U.S. audiences to «The Night Manager», we are thrilled to be working again with The Ink Factory and the BBC on another brilliantly - plotted and deeply emotional John le Carré thriller, «The Little Drummer Girl»,» said David Madden, President of Original Programming for AMC, Sundance TV and AMC Studios.
Aronofsky's latest is a completely barmy metaphysical arthouse horror like nothing you've seen before - a brilliantly original, imaginative and suspenseful piece of work.
There is in seeing Rian Johnson's neo-noir, BRICK, the sense that this is not just a startlingly original, wholly engrossing, and brilliantly plotted piece of work.
In Kockroach, a wholly original work of literary noir, Tyler Knox brilliantly turns Kafka's The Metamorphosis on its head.
Although his starting point will be a brilliantly executed copy of the original, his concern is essentially to apply a contemporary painting and sculptural approach to the works as a comment on the original piece.
She has been called»... a sculptor of wit and ingenuity, clearly in the tradition of Jean Tinguely and Bruce Nauman, but brilliantly original in her use of existential humor to invigorate the works» by sculptor Rob Fisher.
Praised by renowned American art historian and critic Jack Flam as, «a brilliantly attentive and original reading of Jasper Johns» work,» this volume not only makes many aspects of the artist's work accessible for the first time, but also reveals an emotional tenor to the man whom so many critics have characterized, wrongly, according to Yau, as aloof or hermetic.
Professor Rosenblum does himself less than justice: he is neither the simple mainline neoconservative that he pretends or the swinging elder statesman evoked by his repeated claims of solidarity with «art historians... of a younger generation» and «anyone under forty,» but an original and sometimes brilliantly eccentric critic, distinguished among other things for his persuasive work on the late eighteenth and early nineteenth centuries as well as for his astonishingly early and penetratingly intelligent recognition of Jasper Johns, Roy Lichtenstein, and Frank Stella.
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