Sentences with phrase «frozen in time»

This incredible country has remained unchanged for centuries, its landscapes and communities frozen in time — but now it's opening up.
A curated collection of their lives well - lived frozen in time.
Frozen in time from the 1990s with inspiration from the 1980s.
Because the moments, the memories, aren't just frozen in time forever.
It's a 60's ranch on a gorgeous lake... frozen in time.
My initial intent was to make the house feel like it had been frozen in time — tumbled - limestone floors and an Aga cooker were meant to emulate the look of a 19th - century English manor, while dark stained oak floors, floor - to - ceiling silk drapes and creamy paint helped create my version of a 1920s Parisian apartment.
One moment, frozen in time — through both the image from my camera and the tender place in my heart where I have hidden the memory of this day.
Everything was kind of frozen in time for a second as I tried to digest what was happening.
It's now part of the Code's preamble in language that remains endearingly frozen in time: «Whatsoever ye would that others should do to you, do ye even so to them.»
What if the tiny, mid-19th century railroad town of Roseville, Calif. had been frozen in time, then thawed out more than 100 years later in the midst of the...
Moreover, to locate customary law as only having authenticity as a pre-colonial object is to suggest that Aboriginal culture is static and frozen in time, and that is not evolutionary like other cultures.
I try to move forward, but no matter how I try, I can't escape the thoughts, feelings, and mental images that keep me frozen in a time I'd rather forget.
When disturbing or traumatizing events happen, those events can become locked in our nervous system as if we are frozen in time with all same uncomfortable feelings.
A disturbing experience or perception of negative experience can be recorded in the body and left «frozen in time
Protection under the NTA is limited - recognition of culture is based on «frozen in time» view of Indigenous culture and societies; and provides for the recognition of only certain types of rights, eg no more than a right to control access to land.
The fact that art and history can be frozen in time is a wonderful concept, and I just love working in a museum environment.
The ongoing need for terrific resumes doesn't mean the job chase is frozen in time.
Their uninvolvement with Siri and Apple car play (To name a few) have kept these potentially useful technologies frozen in time.
Live Photos are beautiful 12 - megapixel photos that, with just a press, reveal the moments immediately before and after the shot was taken, so you can enjoy a living memory rather than an instant frozen in time.
Justice Binnie noted the requirement that the Crown act honourably in its dealings with Aboriginal people, saying that «an interpretation of events that turns a positive Mi» kmaq trade demand into a negative Mi» kmaq covenant is [not] consistent with the honour and integrity of the Crown».10 His Lordship also commented on the need for a flexible approach to treaty interpretation and the requirement to avoid a «frozen in time» approach to treaty rights.11
As our society becomes ever more complex in its multiple communication modalities, its innovations and creativity, and the development of assistive technologies from robots to AI to self - driving cars, there are still areas of human behavior and practice that seem to be frozen in time.
Aside from their unmistakable silhouette in flight, herons and their wading kin may be best known for their statue - like pose, where they seem half asleep, frozen in time... or so they'd like unsuspecting fish to think.
Moreover, fuel usage is ever - changing and diffuse (a majority of petroleum is not used in cars or light trucks, for example), while efficiency standards are by nature both usage - specific and frozen in time.
Given that a hummingbird beats its wings around 70 times per second in flight (and over 200 times per second while diving), it's wonderful to see this magical photo by DeeDee Gollwitzer in which the tiny quick pixie is frozen in time.
These are concerns that economists often raise about regulation: that government mandates may be rigid, inflexible, and frozen in time.
In addition, the dynamic nature of development around the world means that expectations for country action can no longer be frozen in time.
If the world is not frozen in time, then hysteria rules.
The surface was riffled and corrugated like a wild river frozen in time.
The single most important action we can take is thawing a nuclear energy policy that keeps our technology frozen in time.
Ricky Swallow's trompe l'oeil bronze sculpture suggests a rope trick frozen in time; Arlene Shechet's «Space Place,» which also takes its name from Ra, places a cardiod organic glazed ceramic on a contrastingly smooth concrete pedestal.
A series of lucid, three - dimensional portraits, prints, and video portray people in between — frozen in time in unique moments from around the world.
He began to experiment with imbalance, fashioning ever larger works which increasingly appeared to totter, lean, seemingly collapsing but frozen in time at the moment of their disintegration.
The resultant traces render the creature frozen in time and ghostlike.
Extreme and at times uncontrollable, the magic of smoke and fire produces a moment flash - frozen in time.
Though the excavator heads and the magazines were both once lively tools used by people for creation and learning, they now stand as objects frozen in time — still relics that reflect a dystopian vision of our society.
These images of Vicious resonate with the photographs of Pollock buried beneath them, wherein Pollock is (partially) seen either standing over a canvas that has been spread out on the studio floor, hand extended with loaded brush — a performative gestural flourish is frozen in time — or else he is seen sitting or even lying down with cigarette in hand, his body seemingly relaxed in a post-creation, almost post-coital state of exhaustion.
Ranging from a deep charcoal to blue - tinged pearl, the sculptures hover like specters over their terrain and appear frozen in time.
The uncanny, lifelike creatures appear frozen in time and space.
In Photorealism, change and movement must be frozen in time which must then be accurately represented by the artist.
The works in the main gallery are subject to changing light while the works in the side galleries - which are lit artificially - are effectively frozen in time.
The works are a playful nod to the tradition of still life painting as self - contained narratives frozen in time, driven by the symbolism imbued to everyday objects.
Creating complex and incredibly delicate compositions of natural and found materials, Anna's work is characterised by the way the materials appear to float mid-air, creating a sense of an inexplicable moment, frozen in time.
White symbolises the unity that precedes diversity, rites of passage, balance, grace and a moment frozen in time just before disappearance, obliteration, renunciation, abdication and bereavment.
While the paintings look fresh, as if frozen in time, their storage boxes — worn, torn, yellowed, and stained — have begun to decay.
A brush and tube of paint are now fossilised; frozen in time to be seen as a way of the past.
Those exploring the exhibition encountered text on the perils of excessive sitting placed next to a giant red ball, a «Happy Birthday» banner hung above un-inflated balloons seemingly frozen in time and space, a wall covered in overlapping yellow Post-It notes reading «Don't Cry,» and a swarm of copper - colored computer mice huddled on the floor.
The interior resembles a confounding series of hallways, but with a twist: the walls are adorned with hand block - printed wallpaper depicting the delicate cream contrasts of an eighteenth - century floral Georgian Knot pattern.3 The interstitial, liminal presence of walls and passageways has a long trajectory in the artist's work.4 Here, dynamic and surreal corridors become Sosnowska's phenomenological response to an environment frozen in time.
Instead of being one photograph frozen in time, each ceiling is made up of multiple photographs taken over time, allowing for shifts in colour and light as each section was photograph.
When Muybridge first began work on his Animal Locomotion series in 1884, he experimented with photographs that depict one action, frozen in time, from multiple points of view.
The role of the photograph, she explains, is to provide an «armature on which I hang my marks and make my art,» in this case three distinct variations on the same moment frozen in time.
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