Sentences with phrase «great artistic works»

Not exact matches

Like all great artistic ideas, the fences worked on more than just a practical level.
Catholic Studies programs must be interdisciplinary, offering students an encounter with «the imaginative tradition of the faith, its approach to beauty, the great - souled works of literature [and] deep artistic traditions of Catholicism, its understanding of the human person and of the range and limits of politics.»
Its objective is to encourage work of great value to humanity, of a mainly scientific, educational or artistic nature, and to reward such work by means of prizes or study grants, excluding any profit motive and regardless of political, trade union, philosophical or religious convictions.
We're told, since first hooking up The WTFPL is a very permissive license for software and other scientific or artistic works that offers a great degree of freedom.
The WTFPL is a very permissive license for software and other scientific or artistic works that offers a great degree of freedom.
New York City Ballet, under the artistic direction of Ballet Master in Chief Peter Martins, boasts a roster of more than 90 elite dancers and a repertory of works by many of the greatest choreographers in the history of the art form.
Our conversation ranged from his own artistic process, to working with the great Geoffrey Rush, to carrying Giacometti and Lord with him for the better part of his life.
But that deconstructionist argument also tears down any semblance of artistic merit within the work itself: If everything is fictional and false, then there's no nobler rationale for the bare flesh, and thus the nudity in Killer Joe and Compliance is, pure and simple, sheer exploitation — of no greater value than the top - doffing teens of Project X, the bathing beauties of Piranha 3DD, or the softcore action of a vintage Shannon Tweed vehicle on Cinemax.
Editor and Artistic Director Mark Burstein, President Emeritus of the Lewis Carroll Society of North America, has done a great job incorporating more of what he refers to as «myth busting» facts on Carroll's work, not to mention featuring the illustrations of 47 world renowned artists including Salvador Dali, Barry Moser and Beatrix Potter.
Those aspects include choosing great books with real characters working their way through real lives; reading the books with support from partners, volunteers, or tutors, a recording of the book, or a resource teacher; talking about books with other readers — confirming what you understand and adding your own insights; writing about books; and extending understanding through artistic response.»
Lucas also serves on the board of The Film Foundation, the USC School of Cinematic Arts Board of Councilors and will build the Lucas Museum of Narrative Art, emphasizing American illustrative, digital, cinematic and animation art as an avenue for the exploration of the great storytelling history, populist works and artistic innovation of the past 150 years.
The first and definitive biography of the celebrated collectors Dominique and John de Menil, who became one of the greatest cultural forces of the twentieth century through groundbreaking exhibits of art, artistic scholarship, the creation of innovative galleries and museums, and work with civil rights.
And then I remembered, I had an agent, a great agent, I wrote great books (so all the rejecting editors told me) and yes, you are right, self pub has given my stories a voice and an ear and the chance to be read, when they otherwise would have still been gathering dust on my hard drive, yet, on the other hand this is hard, REALLY HARD, it is SO hard to find your way to a readership as a SP, with limited funds (dwindling)... and the glimmer of trad pub — with their power to splash your name around established circles of readers, and their ability to secure a great number of reviews where, as a self pub, doors have been slammed in my face — becomes temptingly shiny again, (it's like childbirth, you forget all the painful stuff with time)... and it all gets very tempting... almost tempting enough to consider sacrificing one work JUST one artistic premise for the trade off of visibility... and then perhaps, just perhaps THEN, my SP efforts will finally sprout wings... but then I hear you and other say, it wasn't worth it, you'd never do it again, and I sigh... And then I wake up the next morning and think of packing it all in, and going to work for Walmart and steady shitty pay... lol And then along comes this blog post.
It also owes to exactly the quality that makes it a great videogame: its willingness to trade the conservative values that would've made for a more «solid,» stable JRPG experience for the unique artistic vision of those who worked on it, a vision that has never been emulated.
As I read this article it reminded me of how we artists can be quite an emotional lot.Sometimes we have trouble being practical.I certainly have mixed emotions about this subject.On the one hand it is always great to sell a piece of art but on the other five dollars doesn't seem worth the hassle.But the point I think many may have missed is that a five dollar work of art would definately be something you only spend a small amount of time on, like a half hour or less.That's $ 10 an hour to do what you love and isn't that what we're all looking for?My husband who's a bussiness man is always making me look at it that way, in terms of an hourly wage.I know that's not very artistic thinking but it sure does make sence in this materialistic world that we live in.
One of the great artistic innovators of the 20th century, Hungarian - born László Moholy - Nagy worked in a dizzying array of mediums, including painting, photography, film, sculpture, advertising and theater design.
See remarkable works created by women in Paris from 1850 to 1900, a time of great social, cultural, and artistic change.
Rosenfeld, like many great artists, produced many artistic series and his work was shown throughout New York at many prominent galleries, such as his «rag paintings» at Ivan Karp's OK Harris gallery on West Broadway during the 1980s.
While many associate the trippy, repetitive style with the «swinging sixties,» Op Art was pioneered in the 1930s by Hungarian artist Victor Vasarely, whose influential work focused on what he considered the two greatest tenants of artistic creation, «pure color» and «pure form.»
It was an easy choice saying yes to this, from an Artistic point of view it was a good challenge working on a football, from a personal point of view as a massive Football fan to collaborate with Neymar Jr also is great.
The exhibition presents a new body of works by Philadelphia - based contemporary artist Thomas Buildmore, as a tribute to the great artistic achievements in art history.
Through filming out - of - the - way galleries and non-headline personalities, his work documents an artistic network we might not otherwise see and broadcasts it to the greater public, without costing a dime (and without so far earning him a penny).
Examining the development and artistic exploration of one of the greatest artists of the twentieth century, this unprecedented volume presents the works of American artist Mark Rothko from the 1940s, a time when his most essential development as a painter occurred, dramatically and in a very compact space of time.
Hamish Jenkinson, Art Curator at Lights of Soho and former Artistic Director of the Old Vic Tunnels states: «With Soho changing at such a rapid rate, it's a great privilege to bring together so many fantastic artists, working together to ensure Soho's creative legacy is upheld long into the future.
Highlights of the show include a memorial gallery dedicated to the extraordinary artistic achievements of the late RB Kitaj, featuring some of Kitaj's greatest works alongside recent paintings which are available for sale.
«The Foundation has enabled and encouraged young artists working in this tradition and the Dialogues provides these emerging artists an opportunity to share their work with a greater artistic community and to forge a deeper understanding of their collective vision for a better society.»
Now recognized as one of the world's greatest treasuries of seminal artistic, literary, musical, and historical works, The Morgan Library & Museum began in the 1890s as the private collection of the legendary American financier Pierpont Morgan.
Dash places great emphasis on physical contact in her artistic process, channeling her body into her work through touch.
As he elaborates on their similarities and differences in accordance with his rejection of residual European influences in favor of the new application of fabricated objects and industrial products, we realize that his argument is part of his greater advocacy for the works of the artists of his generation (similar to what Clement Greenberg wrote a decade earlier in 1956, in his equally significant essay, «American - Type Painting»), and further deriving from his own artistic output at the time.
With more than 250 works on show, the exhibition explores the tireless experimental spirit that drives Raysse's entire artistic output, from his small, playful sculptures to the self - discipline of drawing; from films expressing the libertarian trends of the 1970s to Raysse's use of neon as colour; and from installations celebrating consumer society to his paintings, which represent the most complete aspect of his work — among them, transcriptions of great Renaissance masterpieces, female portraits, large group paintings, and imaginary landscapes.
It is to the great credit of curator Gabriel Florenz and the Pioneer Works team that the current exhibition dramatically expands this reading by reactivating the solid light films within a broader artistic context.
A stunning and intimate depiction of Picasso's «golden muse», Marie - Thérèse Walter, the work was painted at the apex of Picasso's artistic production, and captures the rapturous desire of his greatest compositions.
Artists such as Barry Jenkins, Terrance Nance, and Jason Jeffers will present their work at public programs intended to serve the South Florida artistic community and greater regional audiences.
Digesting the rich artistic fare in the booths (including an amazing group of works on paper by Arshile Gorky at Hauser and Wirth, Lee Krasner at Paul Kasmin, and a superb wall of Jasper Johns and Brice Marden at Matthew Marks) is a great way to build an appetite.
Known for it's great program of noteworthy exhibitions, Blum and Poe presents a collection of works by Kishio Suga spanning across fifty years of his artistic practice.
Francis Bacon and the Masters looks at the artistic influences of one of our most visceral and engaging modern painters to expose exciting parallels between Bacon's unflinching artistic outlook and the work of some of art's great practitioners; Van Gogh, Rembrandt and Velázquez to name a few.
In fact collaboration of sorts is nothing new for the two artistic greats; as Kapoor told Artlyst as we walked together to the Olympic stadium in Stratford, site of the artist's Orbit tower, «I dedicated a work to Ai Weiwei, a few years ago then he made a video, Gangnam style, then I made one.
Vojin Bakić was an artist of great creative energy who, during his nearly fifty years of creative work, had produced a large number of works of exceptional artistic quality.
Atlanta - based Artadia board member Louis Corrigan added, «I congratulate these amazing awardees who represent a great diversity of artistic practice and affirm the extraordinary talent of the larger community of visual artists working in Atlanta.
If the above three women played a catalytic role in the history of contemporary art, on the role of women in a male - dominated field until then, Hannah Wilke is the great feminist of the»70s, whose work and attitude (she died from cancer and photographed the whole process of the disease), she really emphasized what psychic and artistic vigor means.
Seeing these avant - garde works triggered her «first great artistic crisis.»
This exhibition brings together striking works by Michelangelo da Caravaggio, Giovanni Benedetto Castiglione, Giambattista Tiepolo, Carlo Maratta, Giovanni Caracciolo, and Giuseppe Cesari (called Il Cavaliere d'Arpino), among others, that reflect a vibrant range of artistic innovation from three of Italy's great cities.
Through these works, Vedova demonstrated greater artistic freedom, foreshadowing the arrival of installation art.
A Century in Flux aims to make a selection of modern works accessible for study by researchers, scholars, artists, curators, and art enthusiasts to encourage a greater understanding of the region's history of artistic production.
As someone who finds great belonging, empowerment and focuses on my creative work, I wanted to further explore the emotional benefits of artistic expression.
With this exhibit, we seek to not only commemorate a great artist but also take inspiration for our own artistic exploration of his work.
A great appreciator of hip - hop music and DJ culture, Robleto views his work as a mixtape or sampling of humanity, recycling old items and reconstructing them into new artistic forms, as a means to viewing the future through the past.
This major traveling exhibition reveals the exceptional variety of Native artistic production, ranging from the ancient ivories and ingenious modern masks of the Arctic to the dramatic sculptural arts of the Pacific Northwest, the millennia - long tradition of abstract art in the Southwest, the refined basketry of California and the Great Basin, the famous beaded and painted works of the Plains, and the luminous styles of the Eastern Woodlands, including the Great Lakes.
This show takes us into the mind of one of our greatest contemporary architects, inspired by the artistic offerings of Modern Art and more recent emerging creative work.
After years marooned in the artistic wilderness, Tacita Dean's maritime works are earning her great acclaim, discovers MOIRA JEFFREY Dundee is, of course, the City of Discovery, a port whose whaling tradition made it uniquely equipped to build Captain Scott's famous vessel for his Antarctic exploration.
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