Sentences with phrase «fragmentary information»

For a 2011 project commissioned by the British public art association Artangel, Gander created «Locked Room Scenario,» a group show of inaccessible, partly visible artworks by fictional artists that forced viewers to adopt what the artist describes as a «detective's mentality» in attempting to piece together the fragmentary information they encountered.
Assist disease control by providing up - to - date geographical information about known and newly - emerging forms of drug resistance, by examining genetic variation in the context of how whole pathogen genomes are evolving rather than as fragmentary information about individual genetic changes or polymorphisms.
The committee cleared her of the central charge of deliberately submitting expenses claims to which she was not entitled, but said she had breached the ministers» code of conduct by providing «incomplete documentation and fragmentary information» to the inquiry.

Not exact matches

They did have fragmentary anecdotal information on Q4 and monthly data on spending and employment.
Our information is fragmentary, and not easy to combine into an intelligible whole.
After switching our own cats to a raw meat diet in 2008 and seeing the dramatic changes in even our young, healthy cats, we formed the Feline Nutrition Education Society to change how people thought about «cat food» At the time, information was scattered, often fragmentary and not very friendly to the beginner still trying to figure it all out.
When drawing her fragmentary narratives she asks, «what is the minimum information needed to move the story along?»
The complex, abitrary layering of fragmentary images and texts in the work of these affichistes has come to seem increasingly prescient of the information overload as we enter the new century.
Uslé's works appear based in the seemingly fragmentary visual world of postmodern urbanism and technological civilization, engaging with the constant process of filtering with which our «inner eye» responds to today's optical mass of information.
I'm all for an exhibition that privileges experience over information, but I think some context would have made the show less fragmentary and confusing.
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