Sentences with phrase «from early flowers»

Not exact matches

«The energy market is changing more rapidly than we could have imagined, and it's changing because the costs of competitive fuels are coming down,» says Simon Flowers, chief analyst at Wood Mackenzie, who predicts global demand for gasoline and diesel fuel will peak as early as a decade from now and «certainly» by 2030.
Third and fourth reads of the text have proven to be useful in understanding the «downfall» of the early church; roots of error and departure from NT expectations for a local assembly that have bloomed into flowers with an unpleasant aroma that must be a stench in the nostrils of God.
At first sight, beings and their destinies might seem to us to be scattered haphazard or at least in an arbitrary fashion over the face of the earth; we could very easily suppose that each of us might equally well have been born earlier or later, at this place or that, happier or more ill - starred, as though the universe from the beginning to end of its history formed in space - time a sort of vast flower - bed in which the flowers could be changed about at the whim of the gardener.
From carefully chosen prayer books and collecting flowers to put in front of statues, to trips to Aylesford Priory and quiet early morning Masses on holiday, the love of God was woven into the fabric of their everyday lives.
Not a great start to the wildfire season, but I will admit to enjoying the early show of color from spring flowers.
Present from the early days of famed Parisian House Chloé, flowers have always left their mark at the very heart... Read More
An uninterrupted sequence of fossilized pollen from flowers begins in the Early Cretaceous, approximately 140 million years ago, and it is generally assumed that flowering plants first evolved around that time.
Peter Hochuli and Susanne Feist - Burkhardt from Paleontological Institute and Museum, University of Zürich, studied two drilling cores from Weiach and Leuggern, northern Switzerland, and found pollen grains that resemble fossil pollen from the earliest known flowering plants.
There are countless examples of how global warming is affecting life, from plants flowering earlier in spring, to species spreading to areas that were once too cold for them to survive, to birds becoming smaller.
The previous record - holder for earliest moth - butterfly fossils came from about 130 million years ago, a bit after a major expansion of flowering plants.
The fossil, taken from amber mines in Myanmar, dates 97 - 110 million years ago to the early - to - mid Cretaceous, when the land was still dominated by dinosaurs and conifers, but the earliest flowering plants, grasses and small mammals were beginning to evolve.
In the early stages of plant regeneration, plants benefit from the interaction with animals: bees pollinate flowers and maintain gene flow among plant populations, while birds disperse seeds that can establish as seedlings at new locations.
By comparing contemporary photos with shots from a century ago, «you can literally see that trees are leafing out and the plants are flowering earlier now,» says [Richard] Primack, of Boston University.
By comparing contemporary photos with shots from a century ago, «you can literally see that trees are leafing out and the plants are flowering earlier now,» says Primack, of Boston University.
Researchers have unearthed the earliest evidence of a bird sipping nectar from a flower.
«The pattern of co-occurring species remained stable through the evolution of land organisms from the earliest tetrapods through dinosaurs, flowering plants and mammals,» said Anna K. Behrensmeyer, a paleobiologist with the Smithsonian's Museum of Natural History and a co-author of the study.
The cuckoo collection is decorated with a design of Chinese flowers and birds, dating back to the early 19th Century and taking its inspiration from the fabulous Wedgwood archive pattern books from this period.
Mold grows into vast, all - consuming patches, flowers evolve in rapid spurts and whatever evidence the scientists stumble across of earlier teams ranges from grisly to deeply disturbing — some of it archived on video.
From the events of the evening, at least as perceived by Jean, we flashback to earlier events in their relationship, from meeting to proposal, followed by the aftermath of Jean hanging on while Herman takes a new lover in his secretary, Lynne (Sevigny, Broken FloweFrom the events of the evening, at least as perceived by Jean, we flashback to earlier events in their relationship, from meeting to proposal, followed by the aftermath of Jean hanging on while Herman takes a new lover in his secretary, Lynne (Sevigny, Broken Flowefrom meeting to proposal, followed by the aftermath of Jean hanging on while Herman takes a new lover in his secretary, Lynne (Sevigny, Broken Flowers).
Resource Title Plants Age / Year Group Early Years and Key Stage 1 Total Pages in download ❤ 49 File Type PDF Resource Content Since this unit of work is for the Early Years, the majority of learning takes place via circle time, outdoor exploring and through the use of flashcards but the little ones shouldn't miss out on building their own flower or copying sentences about the cycle that takes place from seed to plant!
Children in Year 5 presented an energetic and exhausting «Streetdance Showcase» before the school community celebrated the 40 years» service of Miss Elizabeth Flavell, an Early Education specialist who shyly received gifts and flowers from the school community in recognition of her commitment since 1976.
Along with the change of seasons from winter to spring comes the anticipation of new growth — it may be seen in the budding of leaves or blooming of early flowers.
Like wild flowers in an early morning meadow glistening with dew and I, a butterfly or bee, flitting from bloom to bloom, immersing myself in a kaleidoscope of experiences which pass through my mind like an ever - changing dreamscape.
You can expect to start seeing flowers stir from their winter slumber in early to mid-April.
From late winter through to early summer (in Australia that's July to October) Kalbarri National Park becomes ablaze with wild flowers, of which there are over 800 species.
Guests staying in a «Privilege» category will receive the following, in addition to the All Inclusive amenities: • Private check - in and check - out at the Valentin Privilege Lounge • Pre-arrival concierge services at [email protected]Early check - in and late check - out (subject to availability) • Daily newspaper room delivery • Bottle of sparkling wine upon arrival • Fruit basket & petits fours once per stay • In - room fresh flowers once per stay • Tailored made mini-bar from a selection of premium drinks on the Privilege Menu • Beach bag • Lobster included at any of the a la carte restaurants • Restaurant reservations through the Privilege Club concierge if desired • Reserved lounge chairs under guest names at pool or beach • Exclusive access to the Privilege Lounge inclusive of Wi - Fi, concierge service, ultra premium bar service, and snacks (subject to hours of operation) Important information: Certain restrictions may apply.
Observing the way plants, trees and flowers push up against the dappled, translucent glass of these majestic buildings, hinting at what lies inside, is something that all began when, in 2015, on the way home from a «particularly bad day in the office», Samuel got off the train early to visit a botanical garden.
Exhibited across two floors of the gallery, the paintings here range in scale from the tablet - sized Boardwalk Barter a reminiscence from the artist's earlier years selling his work in Venice, California, to one of his signature, immersive flower - like explosions, which can be read as either the conceptual origin or the end point of all other work.
The ideas within Estes» paintings in Dispatches from the Front Lines come out of the feminist art movement of the early seventies and the subsequent flowering of the pluralism and inclusiveness of that time.
Still Life paintings, sculptures, and drawings, produced from 1972 to the early 1980s, cover a wide range of motifs and themes, including the most traditional such as fruit, flowers, and vases.
In her latest series, the flowers from her earlier work, have been pollinated and developed into fruits or vegetables.
There's his famous hypercolor, hypercontrast prints of hibiscus flowers; his tabloid «Death and Disaster» series from the early 1960s; square celebrity portraits of Elizabeth Taylor, Marilyn Monroe, and Jean - Michel Basquiat; a 1986 self - portrait of the aging artist in his «fright wig»; a grouping of massive Pop - ified Chairman Maos; and stacks of Brillo boxes.
1996 Morris Graves: The First Movement, 1935 - 1955, Schmidt Bingham Gallery, New York, NY Morris Graves: Flowering, Seattle Art Museum, Seattle, WA Morris Graves: Early Work, Drawings and Paintings from 1930s through 1950s, Greg Kucera Gallery, Seattle, WA
The first three ground - floor rooms trace Rodin's beginnings as a sculptor, from an early portrait of his pinch - faced father Jean - Baptiste Rodin (1860)-- the first sculpture he kept — to a terracotta bust of a Young Girl with Flowers on her Hat (1870), a vision as pretty as a Fragonard from his period in Belgium as an ornamental sculptor.
The 1980's were characterized by his use of new materials with ephemeral qualities, such as flowers, straw, or ash while early exploited lead became more dominant, due to his purchase of the lead roof from a Cologne cathedral when the replacement was done.
From the delicate nature of early wall sculptures — including Diary of Flowers (1994), composed with hundreds of doodled paper napkins, and Changing Things (1997), made from disassembled silk flowers — to the large cut - paper photographs of flowering trees, gold - leafed newspaper pages, and light - filled mirror mosaics of the past decade, Hodges» art typically begins as humble, even overlooked materials that are transformed through his toFrom the delicate nature of early wall sculptures — including Diary of Flowers (1994), composed with hundreds of doodled paper napkins, and Changing Things (1997), made from disassembled silk flowers — to the large cut - paper photographs of flowering trees, gold - leafed newspaper pages, and light - filled mirror mosaics of the past decade, Hodges» art typically begins as humble, even overlooked materials that are transformed through hisFlowers (1994), composed with hundreds of doodled paper napkins, and Changing Things (1997), made from disassembled silk flowers — to the large cut - paper photographs of flowering trees, gold - leafed newspaper pages, and light - filled mirror mosaics of the past decade, Hodges» art typically begins as humble, even overlooked materials that are transformed through his tofrom disassembled silk flowers — to the large cut - paper photographs of flowering trees, gold - leafed newspaper pages, and light - filled mirror mosaics of the past decade, Hodges» art typically begins as humble, even overlooked materials that are transformed through hisflowers — to the large cut - paper photographs of flowering trees, gold - leafed newspaper pages, and light - filled mirror mosaics of the past decade, Hodges» art typically begins as humble, even overlooked materials that are transformed through his touch.
From the delicate nature of early wall sculptures - including Diary of Flowers (1994), composed with hundreds of doodled paper napkins, and Changing Things (1997), made from disassembled silk flowers pinned to the wall - to the large cut - paper photographs of flowering trees, gold - leafed newspaper pages, and light - filled mirror mosaics of the past decade, Hodges» art typically begins as humble, even overlooked materials that are transformed through his toFrom the delicate nature of early wall sculptures - including Diary of Flowers (1994), composed with hundreds of doodled paper napkins, and Changing Things (1997), made from disassembled silk flowers pinned to the wall - to the large cut - paper photographs of flowering trees, gold - leafed newspaper pages, and light - filled mirror mosaics of the past decade, Hodges» art typically begins as humble, even overlooked materials that are transformed through hisFlowers (1994), composed with hundreds of doodled paper napkins, and Changing Things (1997), made from disassembled silk flowers pinned to the wall - to the large cut - paper photographs of flowering trees, gold - leafed newspaper pages, and light - filled mirror mosaics of the past decade, Hodges» art typically begins as humble, even overlooked materials that are transformed through his tofrom disassembled silk flowers pinned to the wall - to the large cut - paper photographs of flowering trees, gold - leafed newspaper pages, and light - filled mirror mosaics of the past decade, Hodges» art typically begins as humble, even overlooked materials that are transformed through hisflowers pinned to the wall - to the large cut - paper photographs of flowering trees, gold - leafed newspaper pages, and light - filled mirror mosaics of the past decade, Hodges» art typically begins as humble, even overlooked materials that are transformed through his touch.
But having thus been «branded» the sexy artist, O'Keeffe resisted the narrowcast and backed away from being photographed nude and «sequestered» her abstract work — her earliest passion — and gave way to more realistic drawing of bones and mountains and flowers.
These have ranged from his early photorealist airbrushed paintings (1969 - 1977) to his recent more loosely rendered acrylic flower paintings.
Selected exhibitions at Kunsthaus Zürich: «Signs and Wonder — Niko Pirosmani and Contemporary Art», 1995, «Birth of the Cool — American Painting from Georgia O'Keeffe to Christopher Wool», 1997, «Martin Kippenberger — Early Paintings, Sculptures and the Complete Posters», 1998, «Hypermental — Rampant Reality from Salvador Dali to Jeff Koons», 2000, «Public Affairs», 2002, «Georgia O'Keeffe», 2003, «Sigmar Polke — Works & Days», 2005, «The Expanded Eye — Stalking the Unseen», 2006, «Peter Fischli & David Weiss — Flowers and Questions», 2007,» Friedrich Kuhn — Der Maler als Outlaw», 2008, Katharina Fritsch, Kunsthaus Zurich and Deichtorhallen Hamburg, 2009.
Mapplethorpe's earliest pictures of flowers date from 1973, not long after he had been given a Polaroid camera by his friend John McKendry, curator of prints and photographs at the Metropolitan Museum of Art.
Since its New York flowering in the early seventies, Graffiti has morphed from underground bad - boy turf marking to chic gallery darling to corporate logo design and back.
Ian Breakwell was represented by Angela Flowers Gallery from the early seventies to 1983.
His paintings were mostly portraits, nudes, landscapes, still lifes and flower pieces, but given the early pre-Renaissance influence, they were at the opposite pole from realism, essences of the subject, not imitations of appearances.
At Wave Hill, our plants bloom in late June and early July, their large, upright flower panicles temporarily luring butterflies away from the bounty of perennial flowers in other areas of the garden.
Figura Femminile con Fiori (Female Figure with Flowers), an early and massive polychrome ceramic work by Lucio Fontana from 1948 (pre-dating his famed and prolific «Concetto Spaziale» series of the 1960s), sold at its low estimate of # 1.5 million, or # 1.8 million with fees.
Now the Paris - born, New York - based artist will be building on the promise of that success with «The Restless Earth,» a show at the New Museum that will be her first major survey in the United States, featuring her now - famous Grosse Fatigue along with earlier videos, works on paper, and an installation of books from her library transformed into ikebana flower arrangements.
Executed in a number of stages between 1993 and 1998, the bequest encompassed works from all periods of Mapplethorpe's work, from his early collages, Polaroids, and mixed - media constructions to his iconic images of male and female nudes, flowers, and statues.
From his early «Diary of Flowers» works, drawings of flowers on deli napkins, to his magnificent gold leaf on canvas sculptures, Hodges has maintained a connection to his materials which has afforded him an unmatched vocabulary in the contemporary artFlowers» works, drawings of flowers on deli napkins, to his magnificent gold leaf on canvas sculptures, Hodges has maintained a connection to his materials which has afforded him an unmatched vocabulary in the contemporary artflowers on deli napkins, to his magnificent gold leaf on canvas sculptures, Hodges has maintained a connection to his materials which has afforded him an unmatched vocabulary in the contemporary art world.
The first being at Flowers Gallery (NY) in the group exhibition The Independent Eye: Contemporary British Art from the Collection of Samuel and Gabrielle Lurie which featured a small number of works by Hoyland dating from the early 1980s through the early 2000s.
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