Sentences with phrase «exploring human desire»

Iwasaki is now in preparation for the museum's new phase with a newly expanded 100,000 square feet facility opening in 2014 with several exhibitions including «Eye Wonder,» commemorating the 50th anniversary of the Panorama of the City of New York and exploring human desire to see.
The Frances Young Tang Teaching Museum and Art Gallery at Skidmore College presents Sixfold Symmetry: Pattern in Art and Science, an exhibition of contemporary and historical art, artifacts, and material culture exploring the human desire to use and create pattern to understand the world around us.
The drawings explore the human desire for knowledge and understanding, as well as the absurdity and even futility of that pursuit.

Not exact matches

Why would a God instill you with Human Nature (the desire to sin, to live freely, to explore, to question everything) and then condemn you for doing so.
People want the rich opportunities to explore the full range of human desire those sites actually provide.
This is a dark film that explores human solitude and the unspoken, deep desires that simmer inside us and create a tormented inner turmoil.
A novel that explores the generosity of love, the influence of memory, and our human desire for connection, The Last Days of Ptolemy Grey is a contemporary classic.
Lewis: I don't have a view that much in terms of over-offered, but I do believe as we see the trends and pet owners continued to acquire what we call in some cases almost more human quality type care for their companion animals, that in many cases, and understandably so, see them as extensions or even members of the family, so the greater desire to provide the best quality care as possible I think is going to continue to fuel the opportunity for veterinarians to explore more services.
It's titles like Mass Effect that explore the spectrum of human emotion beyond man's primal desire to collect coins that are slowly but surely transforming videogaming into the «sophisticated, mature experience» we always knew it could be.
The work of Finnish photographer Sanna Kannisto explores the complex space that exists between the natural world and those humans who desire to isolate, possess, and understand it in some way.
Exploring themes of fear, desire, vulnerability and isolation, Goodyear invites the viewer into a dark place where human psychologies and animal behaviour collide and merge.
Instead, her strange forms, which depict things such as spiders, architectural forms such as houses and cages, and the human body, explored themes of loneliness, conflict, frustration, vulnerability, sexual desire, and love.
Through his videos, installations and live performances, Leckey explores the relationship of cultural artefacts to human subjectivity and the production of desire.
And through them, Green explores the complexity of human desire, and the unseen forces that form such desire.
Desire lines is a term used to describe the paths through nature that are made out of the raw desire to explore, humans stepping outside their own boundaries of established routes to form something new — whether it's the path of least resistance or forging something more demanding.
In previous bodies of work, such as her Cyborg (1997 - 2011) and Anagram (1999 - 2006) series, Lee Bul similarly explored the inseparable nature of biotechnology and the augmented human body, as well as the human desire to transcend intellectual, physical, and spiritual limitations.
In the culmination of her residency, Giles» work speaks to this human desire to explore, travel, and even conquer our surroundings,» said Allison Peters Quinn, Director of Exhibitions and Residency Programs at Hyde Park Art Center.
Extending across the entirety of the museum, the exhibition allows for free association between artists and the themes they address: at once playful and dynamic, works from Ryan Gander, Institute for New Feeling, Liu Wa, and Yangzi invite audiences to explore a wealth of possibilities through combinations of meditation and wry humor; classical mediums of sculpture and painting are reinvented by Yngve Holen and Austin Lee; insidious implications of our hi - tech society are skewered by Lawrence Abu Hamdan and aaajiao; the powers of synthetic materials over human desire are brought to the fore by Sean Raspet and Pamela Rosenkranz; and products of Internet culture are given to refined study with Gillian Wearing and Amalia Ulman.
Adriana's Marmorek work is a continuation on the investigation of «The architecture of desire,» a series exploring concepts of desire and pleasure using erotic, social, historical and human elements.
While One Million Kingdoms combines original imagery of astronaut Neil Armstrong during the first manned moon landing with passages from Jules Verne's novel «Journey to the Centre of the Earth» and focuses on the human desire to explore the unknown, AnnLee ponders in Two Minutes Out of Time about her existence as a fictional casing that waits to be filled.
Prompted by a desire to explore people and beliefs in conflict, these works form a metaphor for the fragility of human existence.
For his exhibition The Weight of the Sky the artist explores notions of elementary physics to illustrate the human desire to comprehend and question what surrounds us.
However, the paradox of «the studio» is that it is simultaneously the expressive site of our most intimate subjectivity and our most human fears and desires, as they are articulated through popular music; Catchy aims to unpack and explore this complex relationship.
Inspired by encounters between forensic science and the domestic environment, in her first solo show in London, Haines explores our relationship with everyday objects and the insight these give into human desire, fear and mortality.
Locust Projects is pleased to present Flying Towards the Ground, a new project by California - born, Miami - based artist Michael Namkung, which explores humans» desire for flight, and our concurrent fear of falling.
Koch and Ortkrass met in college in Britain and share an interest in the California Light and Space movement of the 1960s — including the work of Robert Irwin and James Turrell — as well as a passion for architecture, performance art and a desire to explore the way human beings coexist in an increasingly digital universe.
Anthropologists have been exploring the the desire to belong as a universal human trait for decades before social media existed.
Long desired by researchers seeking new ways to treat, cure, and even prevent brain disorders, this picture will fill major gaps in our current knowledge and provide unprecedented opportunities for exploring exactly how the brain enables the human body to record, process, utilize, store, and retrieve vast quantities of information, all at the speed of thought.
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