Sentences with phrase «capture fragments of»

The responsibility to capture fragments of memory, of fantasies and scraps of (quite poetic) dialogue, led me to clip directly from old books.
Dendritic cells capture fragments of invading germs and then present these fragments to other immune cells, which use the information to launch immune responses.
Due as much to some of Hooper's more incomprehensible directorial decisions as to the Gladiator star's miscasting, Crowe only manages to capture a fragment of the obsessive, sadistic and homoerotic nature of Javert that Charles Laughton mastered in the role nearly 80 years ago.
Sometimes Trier's film feels like a riff on that document, capturing fragments of memory for the record.
Rather than tell a story, the text captures fragments of Frida's life, like snapshots with bilingual captions.
Entitled Dog and Mesh Tights, this immersive multiscreen projection of black and white photographs will plunge viewers into the commotion of the contemporary city, capturing fragments of daily life from its unrelenting urban hustle and bustle.
The first vantage point captures fragments of the forms peeking through the treetops and gaps in the woods; as the viewer nears and the distance narrows, the objects» size and formal qualities are revealed.
Emerging from relations to friends, lovers, and places, the artworks in this exhibition record and partake in these connections, capturing fragments of epistolary exchanges and traces of contact.

Not exact matches

Yes, the earliest manuscripts we have are after His resurrection, but there were earlier writings that were not on durable material, and writings that were destroyed by the Romans and Jewish leaders, but the surviving record captures all the necessary Truths, even though the Gospels cover only a small fragment of Jesus» activities during His time on earth.
What stories, images, and fragments of poetry best capture the mutually submissive marriage?
The discourses describing consumer experiences of maternity care in public and private hospitals: «next please, feeling depersonalised in the queue»; «feeling vulnerable in the care of a parade of strangers»; «expected to place blind trust in those who know nothing about me and still feel safe» captures the consumer experience of a fragmented maternity service care and subsequent distress associated with finding themselves in territory they never dreamed possible [45].
NASA's Galileo spacecraft captured these four views of Jupiter as the last of comet Shoemaker - Levy 9's large fragments struck the planet.
Its halo and disk suggest that the collapse of a gas cloud, stellar explosions and the capture of galactic fragments may have all played a role
Now, researchers funded by the National Institute of Biomedical Imaging Bioengineerng have developed a system to capture and identify a scarce blood peptide (a fragment of an inflammatory protein) called P1 that can predict increased risk of preterm birth.
Fifth is the issue of fragmented and uncoordinated health information systems — health metrics data in India are gathered by multiple agencies and surveillance systems but are often incomplete and inadequate; for example, private sector data are rarely captured.
Meyer's lab also optimized a formula of binding buffers that contains isopropanol, which aids in the capture of very short DNA fragments, and the salt guanidine hydrochloride, to help attach DNA to special silica filters nestled inside centrifuge tubes.
Next - gen sequencing is particularly useful for analyzing highly fragmented DNA, adds Eske Willerslev, a geneticist at the University of Copenhagen's Natural History Museum of Denmark, because it can capture the sequences of exceedingly short stretches of nucleotides.
Rohmer, whose films («Claire's Knee,» «My Night at Maud's») are all about desire chilled in the icebox of custom, has brilliantly reproduced the impact of this rationally irrational story: he captures Kleist's almost surreal effect of a grenade whose exploding fragments somehow arrange themselves into a classically formal pattern.
Not only does that reading explain the fervent use of voice - over, never more present here, recounting and musing on each experience with that hushed, inimitable whisper, but it also explains the unique aesthetic of Malick's films: his desire to capture fragmented but ideal forms of corporeal, natural and architectural beauty, rendered so by Emmanuel Lubezki's superlative cinematography and some elliptical, compelling editing.
More info, and a poster that ably captures what appears to be the very fragmented condition of McAvoy's mind, follows after the break.
The main problem is that the story is very badly fragmented, but it still captures a vivid sense of how it felt to grow up in 1962 Britain.
His naïveté is all too obvious when he obliviously delivers the officials a mish - mash of disconnected fragments that nonetheless captures the pompous arrogance and back - room deals of the office.
In his latest photo series, Dubois is able to capture the fluid movements of the world through fragmented images of landscapes reconstructed to create a new type of reality.
Cig Harvey's photographs produce an overwhelming feeling of wonder, admiration, or even fear of the unknown by looking at life on the threshold between magic and disaster, for they are tiny fragments of everyday life captured in a moment of awe.
For the exhibition version of this piece — a cover of a cover — installed in Stair A, Rosenfeld remixed the teens» fragmented commentary, laughter, objections, asides, and vocal stylings that she had captured in their working sessions together.
With a hint of irony, it captures the fragmented but hopeful mood of the moment — but also a timelessness, a reflection of the philosophic eternity in which Ting believed art and poetry lay.
These paintings capture the softness of fabric that adorn a woman's body, presenting them as photorealistic fragments.
From the intricate recreations of the French imperial furniture to film noir stills of Hollywood stars — Grace Kelly, James Stewart, Humphrey Bogart, the artist captures a unique fragment in a time long gone and allows us to contemplate it for a little while longer.
The two side panels of this work capture in thread patterned fragments of celadon pottery.
Dean's compulsion to archive forgotten fragments of history is perhaps best captured in FLOH (2002), a collection of photographs she discovered in flea markets across Europe and America — holiday snaps or banal occurrences retrieved and preserved for the future.
Along with fragments of philosophical and psychoanalytical thinking, they capture the tropes of her artistic processes and traces of her daily life.
The early 18th - century house - turned - museum is full of windows, mirrors, and vitrines, and this combination of reflective surfaces captures the mostly all white sculptures at different angles, giving their reflections a haunting and fragmented quality.
Published on the occasion of a major exhibition drawn from The Buhl Collection, this book demonstrates the prevalence of the hand as a photographic theme, a result, in part, of photography's easy ability to capture fragments and detail, as well as ephemeral movement.
Sketched in intense blue pigment on white glazed ceramic tiles, the artwork captures architectural fragments of the historical facade of Princes House.
Fossil Necklace (2013), a necklace comprised of 170 carved, rounded fossils, spanning geological time; Second Moon (2013), a work that tracks the cyclical journey of a fragment of the moon as it circles the Earth, via airfreight courier, on a man - made year - long commercial orbit; All the Dead Stars (2009), a large map documenting the locations of 27,000 dead stars known to humanity; Light bulb to Simulate Moonlight (2009), an incandescent bulb designed to transmit wavelength properties identical to those of moonlight; and History of Darkness (ongoing), a slide archive of darkness captured at different times and places throughout the universe and spanning billions of years.
He would capture cosmic events and send them spinning into the digital world, editing the imagery and inserting fragments of computer code to aesthetically communicate specific scientific concepts.
Inspired by Roland Barthes's philosophical text A Lover's Discourse: Fragments (1977), the work embodies the push - pull dynamic of romantic relationships, capturing what Zimbardo describes as «the dualities of cooperation and struggle, action and passivity, speech and silence.»
Clements captures alternately quotidian and filmic scenes of fragmented tableaus and narratives, perspectival disruptions, and the passage of time by painting her immediate surroundings and architectural interiors from films.
In this volume, installation photographs from both locations capture what entropy adds to the project: the unfired clay sculptures disintegrate over time, creating continuously changing landscapes of fragmented, crumbling forms.
To develop the imagery for the Jaganatha series, Long floated oil paint on a bed of water and captured its fragmented forms on a circular sheet of Mylar.
Suspended in the atmospheric light of changing skies, Adams captured these isolated urban fragments as signs of both memory and prophecy.
Thus the camera becomes a structural tool and the photograph a view of place structured in time, the capture of a fragment of the world to show his ideas.
The announcement of the exhibition in Art Agenda described the artist's work thus: «the artist captures his own various facial expressions and intentionally fragments [them] into several parts.
With the spontaneity of a screen grab, each work captures and freezes just a fragment of what one instinctively senses is an infinitely greater whole, allowing the viewer a brief glimpse of the endless complexity of our existence, bringing us up short and forcing us to question and wonder who we are, where we fit in and where we are going.
Simultaneously a portrait of his brother and a fragment of his own past, the work captures not only the memory of a hallucinogenic experience, but also the fluid, intangible workings of his psyche.
His canvases capture haunting interiors, mutating self - portraits, archaic and digital landscapes, cryptic fragments of language, and abstractions enlivened by myriad chromatic and stylistic variations.
This material has all sorts of identified uses in industrial and manufacturing, but lead researcher Mietek Jaroniec and her colleagues believe that the kind of activate carbon created from used CDs and DVDs could work well for carbon capture: «The researchers processed disc fragments into two kinds of activated carbon with high surface areas and large volumes of fine pore.
Even a fragment of the representation of and theory about Aboriginality captures the tenor of the visions.
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