Sentences with phrase «called tightrope»

The series called Tightrope included artwork made from the «discarded innards of computers and machines,» that Elias gathers from «Merkato's Menalesh Tera section in his hometown of Addis Ababa.»
Using a device called a Tightrope ™, a Purdue Veterinary Medicine small animal surgery team recently treated the dislocated hip of a female wallaby from Lafayette's Columbian Park Zoo.
The most recent refinement of the technique is called the Tightrope Procedure, named after the hardware that is used.
This knee repair technique is also sometimes called the tightrope or extracapsular repair.

Not exact matches

Harrington calls his act «walking a tightrope between the sectarian irrelevance of the visionary whose vision is not connected with anything that's going on in this society, and the pragmatic irrelevance of those who so perfectly adapt to the daily struggle that they lose sight of the larger struggle.»
That film would be «Man On Wire,» James Marsh's crisp, witty and ultimately very moving documentary about Philippe Petit, the charismatic French performance artist who in 1974 committed the so - called «artistic crime of the century» — an illegal tightrope walk between the Twin Towers of the New York's World Trade Center.
Patrick Ness adapts his 2011 children's novel in A Monster Calls, a drama that walks a tightrope between intimate indie character study and effects - laden fantasy film.
We won't call it the scandal of the century, or even of the year, but the dog who won «Britain's Got Talent» didn't actually perform the tightrope - walking portion of the skit that so delighted viewers and judges.
Somewhere in the exhibition's development, the title «Reinventing Presence» was changed to the snappier Tightrope Walk — which comes from an observation by Francis Bacon about his «tightrope walk between what is called figurative painting and abstractioTightrope Walk — which comes from an observation by Francis Bacon about his «tightrope walk between what is called figurative painting and abstractiotightrope walk between what is called figurative painting and abstraction».
The title, Tightrope Walk, is a quotation from a conversation between Francis Bacon and David Sylvester in which the artist explained his work as «a kind of tight rope walk between what is called figurative painting and abstraction».
Arthur Fellig, called Weegee (Austrian / American, 1899 — 1968) Man Walking a Tightrope (Multiple Exposure), 1950s.
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