Sentences with phrase «earlier generation of women»

KSThat earlier generation of women artists was not given the option of being feminists — and, even later in life, many were not interested in embracing that identity when it was on offer.
This is distinctly different from the earlier generation of women artists such as Frankenthaler, Grace Hartigan, and Joan Mitchell, who bristled at the idea of being called a feminist.
For earlier generations of women, the concept of a due date was «around Thanksgiving» or «late fall.»
The exhibition incorporates contemporary artworks, informed by earlier generations of women, which take a variety of forms — quilts, assemblage, hangings, embroidery on cloth and paper, among others — and that consciously blurs the art versus craft distinction.

Not exact matches

Early Marker: Joined board of Santander in 1989, putting her in line eventually to become the fourth generation of her family to lead the Spanish banking giant and arguably the third - most - powerful woman in global banking.
Yet she is not mentioned again — not in Acts, not in the various epistles, not in earliest martyrology — and that is doubtless why in succeeding generations readers, hungry for a more detailed picture of this woman rumored from the first to have been something «special» to Jesus, have given her the characteristics and experiences of other Marys and unnamed biblical women.
I think most of the Americans are in lost... as most of them do not know who their father is and it is very unfortunate... even if they know who their father is, the mom has children from diff men outside of marriage... and while a child is being raised, watching what his / her parents do to enjoy their life... so things become normal when they grow up... like if you go back early nineteen century, women were not allowed to go to beach without being covered... and now it totally opposite... if you do not have a boyfriend or girlfriend before 15, the parents worries that their teenage has some problem... and lot more can be listed... And then you go to Church, what our children learn from there... they see in front of the Church an old man's statue with long beard standing with extending of both hand... some of the status are blank, white, Spanish and so on... so they are being taught God as an old dude... then you learn from Catholic that you pray to Jesus, Mother Marry, Saints, Death spirit and all these... the poll shows a huge number of young American turns to Atheism or believing there is no God and so on... Its hard to assume where these nations are going with the name of modernization... nothing wrong having scientists discovered the cure of aids or the pics from mars but... we should all think and learn from our previous generations and correct ourselves... also ppl are becoming so much slave of material things...
This capacity in Yahweh for prolonged and violent hatred of Israel's foes is set down in the record with unashamed emphasis, whether in the traditions of the wilderness, where «Yahweh will have war with Amalek from generation to generation,» (Exodus 17:16) or in the early days of the kingdom in Palestine, when Yahweh commanded Saul to «go and smite Amalek, and utterly destroy all that they have, and spare them not; but slay both man and woman, infant and suckling, ox and sheep, camel and ass.»
In an earlier generation, this might have taken the form of separation or divorce, but now, it seemed, more and more women were unwilling to abandon the marriages and families they'd built over years or decades.
Screening and treatment of women with early breastfeeding difficulties may reduce the severity of postpartum depression and enable women to meet their breastfeeding goals, thereby improving health outcomes across two generations.
Onnit started out making supplements to improve brain function and physical performance, but later began selling exercise equipment and fitness education based on techniques used by the earliest generations of strongmen (and women).
Raised in Toronto, Tanya Taylor grew up surrounded by three generations of fiercely ambitious women whose creative approach to fashion inspired her from an early age.
Baby boomer women are more likely to be fit and participate in some kind of fitness regime than early generations, from yoga and pilates, to dance classes and Zumba.
The remaining gold - ranked public charters in Texas are: YES Prep — Southwest, Houston (No. 18 in Texas, No. 106 nationally); YES Prep Gulfton, Houston (No. 20, No. 118); YES Prep — West (No. 21, No. 123); IDEA Quest College Preparatory, Edinburg (No. 22, No. 127); YES Prep — Southeast (No. 25, No. 131); Uplift Education — North Hills Prep High School, Irving (No. 27, No. 134); Uplift Summit International High School, Arlington (No. 28, No. 139); Young Women's Leadership Academy, San Antonio (No. 29, No. 141); Uplift Williams Preparatory High School, Dallas (No. 30, No. 146); Clear Horizons Early College High School, Houston (No. 31, No. 151); Early College High School, Laredo (No. 33, No. 164); Harmony Science Academy — West Houston, Katy (No. 36, No. 192); YES Prep — Brays Oaks, Houston (No. 37, No. 194); Uplift Peak Preparatory High School, Dallas (No. 39, No. 208); Harmony Science Academy, El Paso (No. 41, No. 214); KIPP Generations, Houston, (No. 47, No. 233); YES Prep — North Central, Houston (No. 48, No. 234); Harmony Science Academy, Waco (No. 51, No. 302); North Houston Early College High School, Houston (No. 52, No. 311); East Early College High School, Houston (No. 53, No. 315); Founders Classical Academy (No. 54, No. 333); Harmony Science Academy, Carrollton (No. 56, No. 337); Energized for STEM Academy West High School, Houston (No. 61, No. 372); Harmony School of Excellence, Austin (No. 62, No. 374); Harmony Science Academy North Austin, Pflugerville (No. 65, No. 400); Harmony School of Science — Houston High, Sugarland (No. 67, No. 426); and KIPP Houston High School, Houston (No. 71, No. 451.)
Of the generations surveyed, Millennials are most confident about investing and started earliest: 63 % of Millennial women say they began to care about money and investing in their 20s; however, only 28 % of Gen Xers and 16 % of Baby Boomers say they focused on financial decisions and investments in their 20Of the generations surveyed, Millennials are most confident about investing and started earliest: 63 % of Millennial women say they began to care about money and investing in their 20s; however, only 28 % of Gen Xers and 16 % of Baby Boomers say they focused on financial decisions and investments in their 20of Millennial women say they began to care about money and investing in their 20s; however, only 28 % of Gen Xers and 16 % of Baby Boomers say they focused on financial decisions and investments in their 20of Gen Xers and 16 % of Baby Boomers say they focused on financial decisions and investments in their 20of Baby Boomers say they focused on financial decisions and investments in their 20s.
«Coming To Power» pays homage to the first generation of women artists who pioneered a new artistic genre in the mid 60s and early 70s using explicit sexual imagery.
The legacy of these women is conveyed through a section of the exhibition that presents works by contemporary female artists and designers that reflect and expand upon the work of the earlier generation.
In the meantime however, not only the art market — one of her early works was recently sold as the most expensive work ever by a woman artist — but also and above all a young generation of artists have rediscovered Joan Mitchell and her art.
Lives and works New York) Cheryl Donegan's work demonstrates the concerns and modes of a generation of artists, many of them women, who began to use conceptual strategies in the early 1990s to question the hegemony of canonized artists, many of them male.
Her use of weaving claims a relationship to the reassertion of «women's work» by an earlier generation of feminist artists amplifying the tradition of stitchcraft.
Dedicated with serious focus to art from the late 1930s until her death at age 95, Thomas was one of few women to be part of the early generation of Abstract Expressionists.
In the early 1980s three exhibitions in London curated by Lubaina Himid — Five Black Women at the Africa Centre (1983), Black Women Time Now at Battersea Arts Centre (1983 - 4) and The Thin Black Line at the Institute for Contemporary Arts (1985)-- marked the arrival on the British art scene of a radical generation of young Black and Asian women artWomen at the Africa Centre (1983), Black Women Time Now at Battersea Arts Centre (1983 - 4) and The Thin Black Line at the Institute for Contemporary Arts (1985)-- marked the arrival on the British art scene of a radical generation of young Black and Asian women artWomen Time Now at Battersea Arts Centre (1983 - 4) and The Thin Black Line at the Institute for Contemporary Arts (1985)-- marked the arrival on the British art scene of a radical generation of young Black and Asian women artwomen artists.
By the early 1980's Simmons was at the forefront of a new generation of artists, predominantly woman, whose use of the media as subject began a new dialogue in contemporary art.
In Chicago in the early 1970s, we had our own third and best - known generation of alternative spaces (each city can claim its own artist - run history, probably with a fair share of boosterism thrown in), such as ARC, Artemisia (both were feminist galleries formed from West - East Bag, a nationwide network of women artists), and N.A.M.E., with the much - heralded Randolph Street Gallery opening in 1979.7 This is not to mention still - running artist - driven efforts such as the Hyde Park Art Center, founded in 1948, and the South Side Community Art Center, the only surviving Federal Arts Center from the WPA era and the oldest African American art center in the country, famously dedicated by Eleanor Roosevelt on opening day in 1940.
Of course, it was Womanhouse that made The Mood Back Home possible: without the brave combativeness of the early feminists, the next generation of women would scarcely have had the freedom to choose the lives they havOf course, it was Womanhouse that made The Mood Back Home possible: without the brave combativeness of the early feminists, the next generation of women would scarcely have had the freedom to choose the lives they havof the early feminists, the next generation of women would scarcely have had the freedom to choose the lives they havof women would scarcely have had the freedom to choose the lives they have.
«Ghosts,» she says, explaining that the island evokes — or rather is haunted by — the spirits of a generation of men and women: artists, thinkers, people of color, the affluent, the middle class, the ignored, the displaced, those let down by their government, those who caught the disease too early, those who didn't realize they had caught it at all, those who thought they would never catch it but who did, all of those who were lost to the dark times when she first came to New York City in the early 1990s, at the height of the AIDS crisis.
By omitting older artists and references to earlier waves of feminism, NSFW implies that previous generations of women artists somehow failed to create a «bold new visual language of desire, breaking expectations and social norms to be nakedly afraid.»
So the early acclaim for the Castelli shows and the selection of Bontecou and Louise Bourgeois in 1964 as the only women from North America to exhibit in the prestigious Documenta III in Germany made less of an impression than it would on the current generation.
It focuses on a generation of African women artists who started to work in the early 1990s and in whose practice the body is central.
Friday 1st: Supporting the next generation of mental health researchers — Early Career Researchers and Women in Health and Medical Research
Eventually, this will enable us to examine more closely the early stages of emotional regulation and mental health problems between three generations of women.
Today, 27 percent of millennial women and 21 percent of millennial men have obtained a bachelor's degree, compared to 7 percent and 12 percent among the silent generation (those born between the mid 1920s and early 1940s), respectively.
a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z