Sentences with phrase «decadence seem»

There is something about the current moment that makes the designer's fascination with decadence seem less of an indulge...
There is something about the current moment that makes the designer's fascination with decadence seem less of an indulgence than it once was, and it was reflected in the clothes he presented.
The pope, with all of his luxuries, fancy names and decadence seems to be an odd middleman.

Not exact matches

In a time when food companies are going natural, the cereal company seems to be betting on decadence.
With the decadence of the T'ang Dynasty, in whose prosperous years Christians, with other foreigners, had been attracted to China, the alien groups seem to have dwindled.
I think I'm unconsciously squeezing in as much decadence as I can before January begins, when everyone seems more interested in salad than carb stuffed carbs.
I'll take «sentimental about babies» any day over «sentimental about birth» Prioritising the second over the first seems to me like a particularly dim form of decadence.
Peanut butter in here might seem like a curveball, but it gives this soup some decadence.
While next season most trends seem to be favouring a crass reaction against minimalism and bringing the excessiveness and decadence of past decades, i.e. print - and vivid color clashing, kitschy pastels, sequins, animal prints, and many others, a lot of us do not consider minimalism to be a trend, which is not reduced to a very timeless style, but it also a very necessary lifestyle.
Hannibal doesn't seem to be about anything but its own swank decadence.
The idea of getting a daily newspaper or a weekly or monthly magazine on paper seems incredibly wasteful to the point of decadence.
The show seems to critique our culture from the vantage point of some near future where there's been a return to the decadence of a formalist, art - for - art's - sake, aesthetic.
In an art world that seems at times to relish over-intellectualization, this exhibition shows the pure enjoyment materiality can give us through intuitive explorations of tactility and sensory decadence.
Knowing all we do about the damage wrought by burning fossil fuels — both to our immediate health and to the long - term viability of our habitat — it would seem an act of obscene, destructive decadence.
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