She studied theatre and dance in college and has spent years
exploring human movement, meaning and communication.
Not exact matches
A $ 179,000 grant will enable Dr. Saleh in
Human Performance and Engineering Research to
explore the effects of combining physical and mental practice for the rehabilitation of upper extremity
movement impairments secondary to TBI.
It is a
movement discipline that
explores the various ways that
human beings relate to the surrounding space, and fosters awareness of individual
movement patterns in order to discover healthier ways of moving and relating.
Explore XPT's unique
movement program: land and water - based workouts that push
human physiology and encourage essential adaptation.
We grew apart from the primal rhythms native to us and we abandoned our old ways to
explore human life through a masculine - centric lens of action and
movement.
After she graduates, Brooks will spend the summer working at the Strategic Data Project at the Center for Education Policy Research at Harvard, and she hopes to continue to
explore the freedom of
movement as a
human right in the context of expanding globalization.
Camille Utterback, a pioneer in the field of digital and interactive art, whose work
explores the aesthetic and experiential possibilities of linking computational systems to
human movement and physicality in visually layered ways.
«For this original performance, Jonah Bokaer uses
movement to
explore the timely subject of
human migration around the Mediterranean Basin, a narrative of personal significance to the artist, who is of Tunisian heritage,» said Andrea Grover, Century Arts Foundation Curator of Special Projects at the Parrish, and curator of Platform.
The exhibition, which
explores the aesthetics of
movement and includes kinetic sculptures that echo the
movement of natural form and
human experiences, is free and open to the public.
Madeline Hollander is a New York based artist who works primarily with durational performance and video to
explore how
human movement and body - language negotiate their limits within everyday systems of technology, intellectual property law, and mass - culture.
Todd Merrill Studio presents an exhibition of contemporary artists
exploring the
human figure through the themes of
movement, expression, and abstraction.
Using performance, movable objects and the gallery's existing architectural framework, this performance
explores the relationships between the
human body and the constructed environment, between exposure and concealment, between
movement and space.
Her performative sculptures, both made between the 1960s and today, combine nylons filled with sand and ritualized
movements to
explore the dual fragility and resilience of the
human body — and the black female body in particular.
These abstract paintings were designed (1) to
explore human emotional reaction to various colour combinations, without distracting the viewer with unnecessary content, or narrative; and (2) to create a sense of
movement on the canvas, thus creating an ultra-primitive life form.
The «mark of the drama»; the stir of the
human spirit shaped in the world of Abstract Expressionism, Color Fields, and the paintings building psychic images of the «DADA» period («Art for Arts sake»),
movement influenced by the art of music, musicians, poets — the longing to
explore and invent time — abstractions.
This sculpture and the smaller Study for Fifteen Points / I (2016), which is also on display,
explore the instinctual ability to perceive the
human form in motion with only minimum visual information, deciphering even the subtlest nuances based on those
movements.
She plans to
explore the far ends of the spectrum of
human movement and ambition in pursuit of hope and new possibilities.
In this new body of work, Mbugua
explores «Dance» and the way in which the
human body communicates through
movement — creating expression, showcasing feelings and inspiring varying degrees of emotion in the observer.
The exhibition will bring together recent work in which the Icelandic - Danish artist
explores the
human perception of temporality and
movement through the spatial interaction between the viewer and the artworks.
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.
Although extremely different artists, one a realist painter, the other not faithful to any particular
movement, Hennessy and Rama both
explore human sexuality, gender and identity while challenging the political and social culture of their time.
Drawing on previously undisclosed
human rights commission records, Clément
explores the rise and fall of what was once the country's most progressive
human rights legal regime and reveals how political divisions and social
movements shaped the
human rights state.
«
Exploring and articulating the cultural determinants of health acknowledges the extensive and well - established knowledge networks that exist within communities, the Aboriginal Community Controlled Health Service
movement,
human rights and social justice sectors,» she said.