Sentences with phrase «filled with scaffolding»

The gallery is filled with scaffolding, moving apparatus and trolleys.

Not exact matches

Men have found no better thing than this to do for kings at their crowning and for criminals going to the scaffold; for armies in triumph or for a bride and bridegroom in a little country church; for the wisdom of a Parliament or for a sick old woman afraid to die... One could fill many pages with the reasons why men have done this, and not tell a hundredth part of them.
Warnke and colleagues then filled the mesh with bone mineral blocks of bovine origin, that would act as a scaffold for the growing bone.
Soker and his colleague Pedro Baptista built the livers by taking ferret livers and stripping them of all their native cells, leaving just the collagen «scaffold» of the organ, which they then filled with human liver cells.
They grew these myoblasts by many folds and then put them into a supportive 3 - D scaffolding filled with a nourishing gel that allowed them to form aligned and functioning human muscle fibers.
The principle component of the new panel, hydrogel — a polymer network filled with water — is safe to use in and on the human body, having already found use in applications ranging from drug delivery to creating scaffolds for tissue engineering and wound healing.
Bones are made of a mineral and protein scaffold filled with bone cells.
Why, above all, has Tate Modern filled its Turbine Hall with the huge non-event that is Abraham Cruzvillegas's Empty Lot, a portable allotment of planks and scaffolding that might, if we're lucky, look mildly interesting in a couple of months, when it could have devoted some space to Collishaw?
Mexican artist Abraham Cruzvillegas has erected a scaffolding platform on which he has placed a network of triangular planters filled with soil from various London parks.
Rashid Johnson's show «Fly Away» is rewarding at every turn in Hauser & Wirth's meandering, multi-gallery space on West 18th Street, climaxing with Antione's Organ — a large rectangular grid of minimal scaffolding filled with a variety objects (mostly plants) and periodically, a performing pianist.
Her installation, Never Again, 2005, consists of a series of leather and chain hammocks suspended from metal scaffolding; viewers are invited to sit on them, filling the space with the sound of jangling metal.
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