Sentences with phrase «complex work means»

There are other factors that drive value such as the scale and risk involved, but generally speaking, more complex work means higher fees.

Not exact matches

«Tweaking the age like that is a very simplistic solution that won't work to a very complex problem,» Trudeau said of an initiative that was meant to save more than $ 10 - billion a year once fully implemented in 2030.
This meant that we had to design and work out a program that would make the changes accordingly; it was a very complex process.
Bitcoin is a mined digital asset, meaning that new coins are constantly created by huge datacenters processing complex math problems, or «proof of work
The building of the Church as a community with complex organizational structure, with manifold functions and leaders, with various responsibilities to the society around it, can easily degenerate into the building of religious clubs, of sororities and fraternities and of national associations for the promotion of good causes, if the understanding of the Church's purpose, of its responsibility to God, of the nature and action of God, of man and his history, of the meaning of the Church's work in all the complex of human activity and of the interrelation of the various aspects of its work are lost to view.
At the same time, protein is structurally very complexmeaning that your body has to work that much harder to break it apart.
This meant leaving protein synthesis aside for a while, instead working on viruses and macromolecular immune complexes.
To write truly efficient programs means understanding exactly how the hardware works, and modern computers are not just powerful, they are complex.
The team's work, however, shows that propagation time grows as a power of its size, meaning that while quantum computers may be able to solve problems that ordinary computers find devilishly complex, their processors will not be speed demons.
SINGAPORE (Reuters)- Indonesia's complex rules on land use and the difficulty in prosecuting foreign businesses mean Singapore has its work cut out bringing companies to book under its new cross-border air pollution law.
«This unusually large variation in brightness means that the object is highly elongated: about ten times as long as it is wide, with a complex, convoluted shape,» said Karen Meech, who works at the Institute for Astronomy in Hawaii, in a statement.
Unfortunately, the Western lifestyle — loaded with sugar and processed foods and lacking in sleep and exercise — can cause this complex system to go a bit haywire, meaning the signals for being full and hungry don't work.
Made with toasted coffee and infused with botanicals such as orange and caraway, it has a complex flavour which, like other more traditional amaros, means it works beautifully in cocktails.
While experts want to reduce food to just calories and nutrients, food's meaning to us is far too complex for that to work.
Soderbergh and writer Stephen Gaghan, working from the»80s British miniseries Traffik, steadfastly refuse to force easy, comforting conclusions from difficult and complex situations; as in real life, one is left to decide for oneself who or what is right, and what it all means.
Communication In the context of the leadership and the workplace, communication is more than the accurate transfer of information: it is the means to create trust within diverse and complex working relationships.
My humble personal experience in counseling in many countries, my exposure to and dealing with some complex cases of suicidal attempts in individuals I've been working on, the requests for holding seminars for youth on meaning of life as well as studying some reports I've received on students» suicides, all these have led me to ponder on the problem of education and its purposes.
This means that many youngsters are not yet working with appropriately complex language in their schoolbooks.
We want our students to become young adults who can make meaning in an increasingly complex world, who can find problems worth solving, and who have experience working independently and collaboratively to solve them.
While this presents a challenge, the strategic integration of meaningful closings and reflection into classroom practice gives students multiple avenues for engaging with complex ideas and allows more students to find broader meaning in their work.
«To me this means first acknowledging the work that community educators, mostly in communities of color, are doing to supplement the information our children receive about themselves, their histories, and the worlds in which we exist through schools and classrooms,» says Torres Covarrubias, citing as an example the work of her friend Patrisse Cullors - Brignac at Dignity and Power Now, an organization that helps people affected by the Prison Industrial Complex.
Readiness means ensuring that all learners are given complex work that is respectful of their current skill levels.
The world of work is quickly redefining what it means to be ready — a broader set of aims that reflect fast paced, complex, and diverse workplaces.
The fact that university schools of education do such a poor job of recruiting aspiring teachers for subject - matter competency — and fail to train them properly once they get into their classrooms — also means that children, especially those attending the nation's dropout factories and failure mills, are poorly prepared to handle the even - more complex work that will come once they get into college and the workforce.
The substantial investment in these projects means they require rigorous evaluations to assess evidence of impact, working with complex data sets, and analyses that examine the critical links between implementation and impact.
The world of work is quickly redefining what it means to be ready — a broader set of aims that reflect fast - paced, complex, and diverse workplaces.
The word «fluent» is used in the standards to mean «reasonably fast and accurate» and the ability to use certain facts and procedures with enough facility that using them does not slow down or derail the problem solver as (s) he works on more complex problems.
Select a complex text you believe will be appropriate for close reading, a create a set of questions that will push readers to consider (a) what the text says, (b) how the text works, and (c) what the text means.
A thrilling investigation into the complex meaning of authenticity and the unshakable determination that drives both artists and collectors of their work, The Vanishing Velázquez travels from extravagant Spanish courts in the 1700s to the gritty courtrooms and auction houses of nineteenth - century London and New York.
The project is meant to both «expose the antifemale bias of the art world» and «uncover the complex workings of human perception and how unconscious ideas about gender, race and celebrity influence a viewer's understanding of a given work of art.»
The highly complex and very expensive development costs of these weapons systems, as well as the Department of Defense's (DOD) conservative approach to whom it works with (company trust, expertise and reputation are everything in this business), mean that smaller, less well capitalized rivals are essentially locked out of the market.
I know that in order to make a 6 % increase in the bank I work at, I will have to obtain more licenses to sell more complex products, meet higher sales goals, become my branch's leader in bringing in new business and fostering new relationships, and obtain supervisor authority which would mean being up at 5:30 in the morning for branch openings and late night branch closings, investigating teller differences, and so much other stuff.
But over the years, things have gotten increasingly complex, and there are more issues now than ever, which in turn means more work than ever before for PIJAC.
The only downside is that there is not an English dub of the dialogue, which means I was trying to read subtitles while also trying to hold down the complex controls, and that simply did not work at times.
Throughout Resonating, viewers will note Green's various uses of a fan shape: in early works such as For All & None (1978), the fan acts as an essential symbol, suggestive of deeper spiritual meaning; in Taxes (1993), one of her later black and white paintings, the fan shape becomes a central formal element that unifies the composition; in She Dreams (1996), the fan shapes create a complex formal variation which co-exists with other images.
Vincent Como's work triumphs on three levels: it is embedded with a studied meaning, it is imbued with the trace of a master craftsman who has honed his skills, and it is beautiful and complex to view.
Her multi-referential work presents a complex viewpoint on what it means to be a contemporary woman.»
18th Street Art Center's 2010 catalogue features the work of emerging and prominent local and international artists and curators, whom we have worked with; art exhibitions that have revolutionized the meaning of socially engaging public art; our ground - braking events that have attracted over 3,000 visitors to the 18th Street complex within the last year, and much more!
For Hirst the butterfly holds considerable iconographic power and meaning, and in the butterfly paintings, as is the case with Hirst's finest work, the underlying concept is often complex.
Media acts as the landscape, the wallpaper, or the air, against which highly intimate and personal visual codes unfold, creating a complex constellation of meaning within the work.
I am aware that they probably would not agree with the «complex diversity» label; I am making this my own interpretation of what is, for me, the meaning of their best work.
Jones's deeply complex analysis cites numerous lushly illustrated works; her material, social, and political examination discusses the myriad ways African American artists, often segregated from the art world, articulated racial portraits of blackness as a means of accessing political authority.
His work is deeply informed by his upbringing in Brazil and the complex history of the country: its colonial past, US political interference, and the contemporary boom; while the thinking behind his work is concerned with the subjective understanding of what it means to be on the periphery and the conflict between western and non-western status.
Rosemarie Trockel's work has the rare ability to turn complex visual, cultural, and societal notions on their head using elegantly inventive means.
«A complex painting would be one capable of including many spaces... many qualities of light, of texture, of facture, a wide gamut of colors; it would allow for descriptive representation, schematic or symbolic representation, for geometric and gestural abstraction; and these would not simply coexist, but would somehow be coordinating... and out of multiplicity would arise the work's sense of meaning
As Marepe often uses readymade materials, as well as everyday objects or activities, his work has acquired a complex layering of references and meanings addressing the linkage between the individual and society.
Among the numerous works on display are sculptures that he created with artist friends such as Niki de Saint Phalle, Berhard Luginbühl, Daniel Spoerri, and Eva Aeppli, his sculptures that deal with his passion for motor racing, and two of his complex large - scale sculptures that touch the senses by the use of kinetic, optical, and acoustic means.
1995 Cotter, Holland, Beneath the Barrage, The Modern's Little Show, The New York Times, April 7, p. C27 Hainley, Bruce Next to Nothing: The Art of Tom Friedman, Artforum, November, pp. 4 - 5, pp. 73 - 77 Kastner, Jeffrey, lo - fo, Frieze, September / October, pp. 72 - 73 Kim Levin, Choices, The Village Voice, May 2, p. 11 Mitchell, Charles Dee, «Critical Mass»: More Than Meets the Eye, Dallas Morning News, February 3 Narbutas, Siaurys, Modernus Menas Padeda Atlaidziau Zvelgti I Pasauli, Lietuvos Rytui, August Rich, Charles, At MoMA: A «Mad» Muse, The Hartford Courant, April 1 Schjeldahl, Peter, Struggle and Flight, The Village Voice, April 18, p. 79 1994 Connors, Thomas, Evanston Art Center, New Art Examiner, May Green, David, Doors of Perception, Burelle's, May, p. 18, p. 23 Mollica, Franco, Tema Celeste, Autumn, p. 64 Perretta, Gabriele, Flash Art (Italian edition), Summer Romano, Gianni, Tom Friedman, Zoom, no. 12 Romano, Gianni, In and Out Liquid Architectures (Through a Few Objects, Temporale, no. 31, pp. 34 - 37 Romano, Gianni, Interactive Child, Arquebuse, May, pp. 24 - 25 Tager, Alisa, Emerging Master of Metamorphosis, The Los Angeles Times, May 3, p. F1, p. F8 Trione, Vincenzo, De Soto, Ulisside del Bello, Il Mattino, May 27 1993 Artner, Alan, Sharp Conceptual Show Dares to be Different, The Chicago Tribune, January 22, section 7, p. 56 Auer, James, There's No More Than a Hairbreath Between Art, Reality in This Exhibit, Milwaukee Journal, January 17 Blair, Dike, review, Flash Art, November / December, pp. 112 - 114 Flynn, Patrick J.B. review, Hair, Artpaper, February Heartney, Eleanor, New York, Dans les Galeries, Art Press, October, pp. 24 - 28 Humphrey, David, New York Fax, Art issues, May / June, pp. 32 - 33 Levin, Kim, Choices, The Village Voice, February 23, p. 65 Lillington, David, Times, Time Out, June 16 Lillington, David, Times, Metropolis M, Winter, pp. 47 - 49 Nesbitt, Lois, Artforum, Summer, pp. 111 - 112 Paine, Janice T. Hair Pieces: Exhibition Worth Combing, Mikwaukee Sentinel, January 8, p. 8D Shepley, Carol Ferring, Tom Friedman Shapes Art Out of Everyday Things, St. Louis Post - Dispatch, January 14, p. 3E Southworth, Linda, An Extraordinary Exhibition at Arts and Letters, The Washington Heights Citizen & The Inwood News, February 28, pp. 10 - 11 1992 Bernardi, David, News Reviews, Flash Art, May / June, p. 149 Cameron, Dan, In Praise of Smallness, Art & Auction, April, pp. 74 - 76 Faust, Gretchen, New York in Review, Arts, March, p. 79 Kahn, Wolf, Connecting Incongruities, Art in America, November, pp. 116 - 121 Marrs, Jennifer, Simple Style With a Complex Meaning, Courier, October 2, p. 15, p. 18 Smith, Roberta, Casual Ceremony, The New York Times, January 3, section C 1991 Artner, Alan, Friedman Debuts with Winning Simplicity, The Chicago Tribune, February 22, section 7, p. 56 Barckert, Lynda, The Work of Art, The Reader, March 1 Brunetti, John, New City, March 14, p. 14 Heartney, Eleanor, Art in America, December, p. 118 Hixson, Kathryn, Chicago in Review, Arts, May, p. 108 Levin, Kim, Choices, The Village Voice, September 17, p. 104 McCracken, David, Gallery Scene, The Chicago Tribune, February 8, section 7, p. 68 McCracken, David, Gallery Scene, The Chicago Tribune, August 30, section 7, p. 54 Goings On About Town, The New Yorker, September 23, p. 12 Palmer, Laurie, Artforum, May, p. 151 Patterson, Tom, Trio of Solos: Thoughts on Three Current Shows at SECCA, Winston - Salem Journal, September 1, p. C6 Smith, Roberta, Art in Review, The New York Times, September 13, p. C5 1990 Harris, Patty, Four Summer Art Shows, Downtown, August 29, pp. 12A - 13A Levin, Kim, Choices The Village Voice, August 7, p. 102
I loved Munroe's work, and their representation, these are creations meant to start and evoke complex conversations.
Curator, collector, researcher and set designer, Macuga is a multidisciplinary arist who combines different expressive forms in complex narrative works that are full of meaning.
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