«Make New History», the theme of the second Chicago Architecture Biennial — curated by Sharon Johnston and Mark Lee of Johnston Marklee & Associates — could be read as a provocative invitation for the US to address the wounds of its brutal past, which have long
festered beneath a sanctioned collective amnesia.
The film offers an appealing blend of familiar and novel, repellent and elegant — forever playing with the idea that there is something foul and
festering beneath the surface of this lovely home.
This will allow couples to get to the root of issues rather than allowing them to
fester beneath the surface.
Not exact matches
Wilson's got his arm deep in the twisted mess of wires, pipes, and tubing that
festers there
beneath his truck's dented hood like the intestines of some living thing.
Deqo steps barefoot across the
festering mulch that slides
beneath her feet.
An abscess is a pocket of infection
beneath the skin, and because the surface layer may heal more quickly, it seals the
festering wound so that the sore expands inward.
In his diary, Anselm Kiefer notes: «this heavy lead bandage that can no longer be detached from the paint skin, these
festering sores welling out from the still boiling lead when the pigment
beneath it is not bone dry, the little straws on a field that I painted years ago and that appear as charred leavings on the solidified lead — all this reminds me of the Baudelaire poems I reread last year.»
In his diary — which will partly be published in the catalogue accompanying the exhibition and gives prime access to the artist's creative process — Kiefer notes: «This heavy lead bandage that can no longer be detached from the paint skin, these
festering sores welling out from the still boiling lead when the pigment
beneath it is not bone dry, the little straws on a field that I painted years ago and that appear as charred leavings on the solidified lead — all this reminds me of the Baudelaire poems I reread last year in Portugal.»
Then you can work on it and be over it, unlike these other relationships which are always
festering just
beneath the surface and can go south pretty quickly.