Sentences with phrase «conventional distinction»

As would become his hallmark, he often used them in combination, blurring conventional distinctions between artistic categories.
Long before Peter Fischli and David Weiss made Fotografias, Nancy Spector had noted that the two liked to «undermine conventional distinctions between high and low art.»
For Tajima, these hybrid performance productions question conventional distinctions between talent and crew, artist and audience, and public and private space.
Finally, the conventional distinction between terminating life and allowing to die is useful and no doubt comforting.
Unorthodox construction, diverse pairings and alternative materials blurred the conventional distinction between aesthetic and utilitarian forms, opening the floodgates for limitless appropriation and giving rise to a dynamic new formal vocabulary.
She works with a variety of mediums and genres to blur the conventional distinction between organic and geometric worlds.
With these moments of crudity, the works destroy the conventional distinction between writing and painting — a theme that became even more obvious after Twombly's move to Rome in 1957.
Geumhyung Jeong's work invites us to rethink the conventional distinctions between performance and object.
Early works from the 1990s are brought into a dialogue with recent paintings, demonstrating that the entire work follows a dialectic that discards the conventional distinction between abstraction and representation, and instead treats the subject of each painting in such a formalised manner that it becomes a mere artefact, a transformation of reality into a pure and autonomous expression through painting.
Introduction Essentially this case involves the conventional distinction between proceedings in the Administrative Court and proceedings in the Court of Protection and reminds us of the sometimes fraught interface between the public law duties owed by a public authority, in this case the NHS, and the statutory duties of the Court of Protection in a private law context around best interests for incapacitated people.
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