Sentences with phrase «chance effects»

After the imagery had been transferred, the vertical strips of fabric were shifted slightly — a move calculated to produce chance effects.
If Rothko's art sometimes seems too contained in its aesthetic strictness, its uncompromising integrity also serves as a reproach to artists willing to settle for more arresting chance effects of handling and texture.
In his latest column for PC Gamer Indie, creator of the original X-COM Julian Gollop talks about how random chance effects our perception of games.
Kim Anno, who was also included in the Mills College show, makes frontal, centered, shield - like images that are designed and conceptualized beforehand, if she does allow for chance effects and momentary inspirations.
In the NYSun, David Cohen reports that Saret's use of clustered pencils manages at once to deny the expressive agency of the hand and to generate suggestive chance effects.
The critic Leo Steinberg described this effect in a famous line about Mitchell's work: «the artist's stroke — like a cat's paw on a truant mouse — descends again to score triumphantly for the willed act as against chance effect» (L. Steinberg, quoted in P. Albers, ibid., 2011, p. 239).
This was a chance effect resulting from randomization to placebo vs. treatment and not inherent to the treatment process, since all bone marrow - related treatment procedures occurred after stenting.
It's about direct, instinctual, and highly dynamic kind of art that involves the spontaneous application of vigorous, sweeping brushstrokes and the chance effects of dripping and spilling paint onto the canvas.
Combining the chance effects of paint with the underlying structure of the grid, Richter creates a chromatic palimpsest that hints at a world beyond the picture plane.
Incorporating the chance effects of gravity adds to the overall vitality and boldness of his pieces.
Deconstructing the relationship between figure and ground, Richter embraces the contingency of his medium, enjoying the chance effects of the spontaneous yet confident application of paint.
«Although de Kooning and Pollock made use of chance effects,» notes Calvin Tomkins in his book Off the Wall, «letting the paint run and drip in their spontaneous encounters with the canvas, they were not about to hand over the whole process to accident.»
The viewer cooperates in finding these chance effects as her eyes scan the room.
Action painting, direct, instinctual, and highly dynamic kind of art that involves the spontaneous application of vigorous, sweeping brushstrokes and the chance effects of dripping and spilling paint onto the canvas.
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