Sentences with phrase «culture lexicon»

You know you have become part of the pop - culture lexicon when you have made it onto «The Simpsons.»
The film's exhaustive marketing campaign and ongoing mystery surrounding John Harrison's true identity resulted in Benedict Cumberbatch's name making its way into our pop culture lexicon.
However, controversy did not stop the show's rapid ascent to a place of honor in America's pop culture lexicon.

Not exact matches

What is revelatory is not the particular clues themselves, for many of them (such as the lexicon of terms used) are shared by others in our culture who are not of our faith.
Together the works form a powerful visual lexicon, a yearbook depicting the faces of a new culture forged by the artist.
Her richly layered pictorial works often evoke the forms and imagery of Russian Constructivism but also draw on her own contemporary lexicon of mass - culture motifs and abstraction to reflect on changes in the artist's home city of Moscow since the collapse of the Soviet Union.
In her videos, Prouvost plays with the lexicon of pop music, mass culture, and internet imagery.
The paintings and sculptures further Strother's existent artistic lexicon, which challenges stereotypes, and points to pop culture and art history.
By appropriating images from the mass media — including iconic film posters, album covers, magazine pages, photographic test plates, and simple notebooks — and re-photographing them, Collier creates her own personal lexicon of popular culture.
Doryun Chong, Associate Curator of Painting and Sculpture at MoMA, received the first Independent Vision Curatorial Award in 2010 for his multiple, global understandings of artworks and their contexts, including his groundbreaking lexicon on Huang Yongping's complex web of meanings, intentions, history, conflict, and culture.
His works often call into question issues of police violence and authoritarianism exercised against youth and communities of color, as well as highlight vernacular language, architecture, and food culture associated with the urban lexicon.
Considered the top translator of writing on contemporary art from Korea, Chong is also responsible for the groundbreaking lexicon on artist Huang Yong Ping's complex web of meanings, intentions, history, conflict, and culture.
The combined forces of his formal training, quick graffiti chops, and expert skills as a draftsman, along with multiple artistic influences (Mexican Muralists, tramp art, surfer culture, graffiti from the 1970s and 1980s, the beat poets, geometric abstraction, op art, early video and site - specific works, graphic design, typography, and cartoons) have factored into his unwieldy, yet unmistakable visual lexicon.
His comprehensive knowledge of ancient cultures and Greco - Roman art led to the development of a personal lexicon of forms that reflect the past and simultaneously contribute to the evolution of 20th century sculpture.
The phrases «never talk to strangers» and «stranger danger» are so ingrained within our culture that they've become part of our lexicon.
The lexicon of so - called heteronormative culture neutralizes certain bullying and oppressive language, and he is interested in these moments as they mark a timeline of cultural accommodation,» Butler wrote.
Grids, stripes, circles and squares often taken from decorative structures gleaned from everyday usage (a hyper personal lexicon of graphic, architectural and popular culture motifs) are re-presented as, and within, frames, irises, misaligned systems and off - register imprints.
Yet, while these definitions point towards self - help culture — lifted in fact from Roland Barthes» A Lover's Discourse — nowhere in his lexicon does Barthes include aider, «to help.»
Celebrating the region MOCA calls home is an exhibiti on titled Southern Routes, exploring back roads, communities, and moments that frame the lexicon of culture in the American South.
Theey are eliminating the commo values and lexicon that permit us to communicate with one another and hold us with each other as a culture.
As Eskimos supposedly «rub noses» in lieu of a handshake, and Italians brought with them as immigrants in the early 60's, the custom of kissing BOTH cheeks, (totally foreign, and invasive, to many living here already) and in our own culture, the etiquette requirement for a man never to shake hands with a woman unless she offers her hand FIRST; each culture has its own idiosyncrasies and lexicon puzzles.
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