We know what it means to
confront life and death decisions.
«I like morally ambiguous people who
confront life and death.»
As far as death being more accepted on the farm than elsewhere, I don't believe that it's a matter of being desensitized as a matter of
confronting life and death on a daily basis.
Not exact matches
Unfortunately, when it comes to matters like wealth preservation, if we are not immediately threatened with a financial «
life or
death» situation, the same also applies,
and most of us will not act until we are actually
confronted with a financially devastating event,
and the situation devolves into one of financial «
life or
death» for us.
A man of noble birth, representing the power of Rome, endowed with authority over
life and death,
confronted by a barbarous colonial of no name or estate, a slave of the empire, beaten, robed in purple, crowned with thorns, insanely invoking an otherworldly kingdom
and some esoteric truth, unaware of either his absurdity or his judge's eminence.
In very specific ways it will follow through on these affirmations as it
confronts day by day the issues of
life and death.
Nearly everything God, Jesus, Buddah, Mohammed, Chisna, etc. said about
life and death was meant to be positive in favor of
life and peaceful purpose, but when
confronted with evil, they were quick to take up arms
and defend that which was theirs.
Why didn't Peter enable them to find more meaningful
and productive
lives rather than
confront them in such a way as to shock them to
death?
Although this is not the place to discuss at greater length the nature of evil, human sin, suffering,
death and the relationship between them, they must find mention here for they constitute the chief problems which continually
confront man
and make him question whether there is any justice or meaning to be found in
life.
It relates deeply to how one orders his
life and how he
confronts his inevitable
death.
Instead of being
confronted with the ancient problem of how to explain
death if everything around us exudes
life, we now have to apologize for the precarious fact of
life (
and consciousness) if everything around us in our universe is intrinsically dead
and mindless.
No place
confronts us with
life -
and -
death challenges like
death row.
The matador must
confront it every day, every second,
and each moment of their working
life, struggling in the past, present
and future of a perversely insular world as
death looms close enough to feel its breath on the cheek.
It's a strange but compelling story in which indolence
and dissolution are
confronted in a
life or
death moment.
A sensitive film that helps us understand the bravery
and gallantry of those who have been forced in the prime of
life to
confront death and grief.
After ten years of estrangement, twins Maggie (Kristen Wiig)
and Milo (Bill Hader) coincidentally cheat
death on the same day, prompting them to reunite
and confront how their
lives went so wrong.
When a head injury brings him into contact with a former student turned medico Dr Janet Hartigan (played by Sarah Jessica Parker), his failure to move on emotionally after the
death of his first wife is brought into sharp relief
and Wetherhold must
confront the unhappiness he
and his family
live with on a daily basis.
A powerful piece of cinema that forces us to
confront death and something even worse; the prospect of outliving the love of one's
life.
During a hot summer in rural America, brothers Tommy (Ryan Jones)
and Eric (Nathan Varnson) are
confronted with devastation as
death forces its way into their young
lives.
Only someone who
lived through the AIDS crisis could craft as vivid
and empathetic film about the young, queer, often near -
death activists who
confronted an indifferent government with the urgency of their suffering.
It also sees Varda coming to terms with her own mortality while
confronting the
deaths,
and evolutions, of many French ways of
life.
Wiig
and Hader play two estranged twin siblings who coincidentally cheat
death on the same day, prompting them to reunite
and confront the reasons their
lives went so wrong.
We might be taking it for granted, but after all, when it comes to
confronting ourselves with the reality
and its challenging experiences, do we know what is for us love, what's happiness, what's
life and what's
death?
As frontline health care providers, nurses are
confronted with
life and death decisions every day
and it is critical that they have a voice on the job.
Of course most parents will never be faced with the
life - or -
death stakes the Barbers
confront in Defending Jacob, but I think all parents will see traces of their own hopes
and anxieties in Laurie
and Andy Barber.
Sharma observes his characters with honesty
and empathy, registering the tiniest shifts, the narrowest fissures until these ordinary people,
confronted with questions of
life and death in a new world, turn into indelible historical figures.
As she struggles to find a way out of the sequestered world into which she was born, Linda
confronts the
life -
and -
death consequences of the things people do -
and fail to do - for the people they love.
After Gus arrives to the town of Archangel,
death follows in rapid succession,
and he finds himself not only fighting for his own
life, but protecting the local preacher
and a young, violated girl, as he makes his way south to
confront Hardin.The inevitable final showdown is about to take place in the dusty Mexican pueblo...
Dana Levy's video work similarly fuses
life and death,
and confronts the natural world with the human thrust to order it.
Antiques
and The Arts Weekly, Nov. 18, Historic John Trumbull Paintings Go Up At Wadsworth Atheneum Hartford Business Journal, Nov. 7, Loughman aims to reconnect Wadsworth to community by John Stearns New York Times Style Magazine, Oct. 20, The Renaissance Artifact Collections That Are Back in Style by Gisela Williams Boston Globe, Oct. 17, Face to face with «The Old Man
and Death» by Sebastian Smee Hartford Courant, Oct. 13, Sky Dives, Space Travel Subject of Dulce Chacón's «Fallen Angels» At Wadsworth by Susan Dunne Hartford Courant, Oct. 13 Artists Define Their Femininity In Bruce, Wadsworth Exhibits by Susan Dunne CTNow, Oct. 2, Wadsworth Splendor IX Gala by Alex Syphers Hartford Courant, Sep. 19, Photography Exhibits At Atheneum, Real Art Ways, Lyman Allyn by Susan Sunne Hartford Courant, Aug. 21, Wadsworth Atheneum Begins Free Admission For Hartford Residents by Susan Dunne Hartford Courant, June 14, Wadsworth Atheneum Exhibit
Confronts Violence Against African - Americans by Susan Dunne WPKN, May 28,
Live Culture with Martha Willette Lewis Episode 15 featuring Vanessa German The New York Times, April 15, Gothic to Goth: Exploring the Impact of the Romantic Era in Fashion by Susan Hodara The Wall Street Journal, April 5, «Gothic to Goth: Romantic Era Fashion & Its Legacy» Review by Laura Jacobs Hartford Courant, March 24, Wadsworth's «Gothic to Goth» Celebrates Romantic - Era Fashion by Susan Dunne The New York Times, March 10, Poets Give Voice to Art in «Sound & Sense» at Wadsworth Museum by Susan Hodara Vogue, March 4, A New Exhibition Shows How Fall's Goth-Fest Has Roots in 19th - Century Romanticism, by Laird Borrelli - Persson The New York Times, Jan. 24, Evening Hours Celebrating the Winter Antiques Show by Bill Cunningham The New York Times, Jan. 22, Winter Antiques Show Offers a Collection of Recent
and Rare Works by Roberta Smith New York Social Diary, Jan. 22, Part of the Art The Boston Globe, Jan. 21, Porcelain mastery is in delicate details by Sebastian Smee InCollect, Jan. 15, The Winter Antiques Show Loan Exhibition: Legacy for the Future: The Wadsworth Atheneum Museum of Art by Robin Jaffee Frank The Magazine Antiques, Winter 2016, Sound
and vision: Poetry
and American art by Alyce Perry Englund The Magazine Antiques, Winter 2016, Meeting Ground by Patricia Hickson The Magazine Antiques, Winter 2016, OMG indeed!
By inviting us to gaze directly on the sites of untimely
and tragic
deaths, Chalmers gives us courage to
confront our fears about the end of
life and its remembrance.
Gilbert & George continue to
confront the fundamental issues of existence:
death, hope,
life, fear, sex, money, race
and religion.
Because nearly everyone at some time in their
life is
confronted with seemingly unresolvable personal or relationship issues, significant
life changes like premarital needs, or
death and crtical illness of a loved one.