Changes in our climate may be as subtle as incremental increases in night temperatures in the summer, or as
dramatic as crop failure due to flood or drought.
Not exact matches
Cornish writes: «I like how
dramatic the paintings are
as images, and how this drama pushes and pulls (surges may be a better word) in two directions: the ruffs and ripples of canvas and colour work upwards towards the containing outline, whilst the outline imposes itself on the action it frames: cutting, nipping, tucking and
cropping.»
The same show features canvases printed with closely
cropped details of Meissen figurines machine embroidered in
dramatic colours with enigmatic words such
as «FAUX» emblazoned across them.
They include
dramatic variations in scale, abrupt
cropping of images, and such subtle artifices
as appearing to place his subjects in a luxuriant outdoor setting, which is, in reality, another Katz painting.
The heat would also cause staple
crops to suffer
dramatic yield losses across the globe (it is possible that Indian wheat and U.S. corn could plummet by
as much
as 60 percent), this at a time when demand will be surging due to population growth and a growing demand for meat.
Similarly, according to the Independent People's Tribunal of the World Bank Group in India, the role of the World Bank in reducing state subsidies, reduced access to low interest loans for the poor and the «opening up of the Indian economy to an uneven playing field in international trade in agricultural commodities» resulted in the
dramatic phenomenon of India's infamous farmer suicides, with an estimated 137,000 farmers killing themselves due to their inability to pay off their loans once their
crops failed (for more information, see here and this interview with Indian environmental activist Vandana Shiva
as well).