Sentences with phrase «epochal moment»

«Although there are uncertainties, this is an epochal moment in bitcoin's evolution and opens up [an] option for how it can grow,» Hayter added.
Or so said New Scientist's Fred Pearce who was there to capture this epochal moment for posterity.
And you recently had an article on your own blog where you spoke of some recent developments in fusion power research by Dr. Robert Bussard as «the truly epochal moment of the 21st century; a liminal moment.»
This exhibition includes two new groups of paintings: a selection of self - portraits and a series depicting the Million Man March on Washington, D.C. Displayed as counterpoints in two separate galleries, the self - portraits offer discrete views of the artist as a private individual with a public persona, while the Million Man March artworks — large, unstretched canvases screenprinted with mass - media images — portray arrays of anonymous individuals brought together at an epochal moment for the African American community.
Or so said New Scientist's Fred Pearce who was there to capture this epochal moment for posterity.

Not exact matches

The assumption of an anisotropy of time, along with the «momentariness» of change in spite of the epochal nature of moments, aligns the theory with microgenetic concepts.
Perhaps it hinges on a confusion between (1) the necessity for there to be a modal dipolarity between God and the World and (2) the necessity for there to be an epochal dipolarity within God, that is, for the moments of God to exhibit the fundamental dipolarity (expressed by the Category of the Ultimate) between the present moment of God - as - creating and all previous moments of God - as - created which the present contains.
Influences converged, passion and intellect were engaged, and seminal moments occurred to help shape the process: in 1962 when Irving Blum (who had taken over Kienholtz's position at the gallery) gave Andy Warhol his first solo gallery exhibition ever at Ferus (the Campbell's Soup Can Paintings); in 1963, when Hopps moved to the Pasadena Art Museum and presented the first retrospective of Marcel Duchamp in the US; in 1966 with Ed Kienholtz's epochal retrospective at the LA County Museum; and in the decade from the late fifties to the late sixties when Ed Moses, Billy Al Bengston, and Ed Ruscha among a handful of others were on center stage.
Curated by the Museum of Modern Art's Jodi Hauptman and Samantha Friedman and the High Museum's Michael Rooks, Fast Forward: Modern Moments 1913 >> 2013 uses the collections of the Museum of Modern Art to examine six specific years in the history of artmaking: 1913 (the year of the epochal Armory Show), 1929, 1950, 1961, 1988, and 2013 (a.k.a. the near future, though it will have become the present by the time Fast Forward closes on January 20).
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