Sentences with phrase «how objects of desire»

Combining found footage with items found on eBay, a pastel - hued studio set - up and fragments of text, the artist explores how objects of desire can lose or gain attraction over time.

Not exact matches

Programmers have, rather, fed the computer a learning algorithm, exposed it to terabytes of data — hundreds of thousands of images or years» worth of speech samples — to train it, and have then allowed the computer to figure out for itself how to recognize the desired objects, words, or sentences.
Laura opened her super chic closet for us and showed how style is produced and how she manages all those fashion objects of desire!
It's told from Elio's point of view — how does it feel to be the object of desire?
If you're thinking: How do I look handsome and do I look like an object of desire?
Be prepared to question how flawed our communication with our loved ones really is and to ponder on how fragile our emotional intent becomes on its journey between our mind and that of the object of our desires and affections.
Embracing the linear, abstract and geometric, and the human desire to locate order and beauty in a world that often provides neither, Dahlgren's solo exhibition — his second here — features works (many site - specific or performative) that express how an artist can cultivate awe - inspiring impressions stemming from deliberation and recurring tasks, and from the alteration of domestic objects and common items such as weighing scales, coloured pencils and darts.
What / Why: «We treat desire as a problem to be solved, address what desire is for and focus on that something and how to acquire it rather than on the nature and the sensation of desire, though often it is the distance between us and the object of desire that fills the space in between with the blue of longing. - Rebecca Solnit GRIN is pleased to announce Pools of Fir, a solo exhibition of new painting and photography by Brooklyn based artist Caitlin MacBride.»
Fecteau likes to play with conventions within the art world, such as the desire to name things in order to know or understand them; how art objects age, and how works in the homes of collectors often sport a cobweb or two.
Examples include Pissed Off, 1981, for which the artist urinated on the notorious Richard Serra sculpture, T.W.U., installed the same year; Bliz - aard Ball Sale (1983), for which the artist sold snowballs to passersby, in a mockery of conspicuous consumption and the desire for ownership of even ephemeral objects; and How Ya Like Me Now?
«The New - York Historical Society explores how shoes have transcended their utilitarian purpose to become representations of culture — coveted as objects of desire, designed with artistic consideration, and expressing complicated meanings of femininity, power, and aspiration for women and men alike.
Illustrating how the African archive — broadly understood as an accumulation of representations, images, and objects — appears in selected contemporary lens - based practices, the exhibition stages a dialogue between the distance of the past and the desiring gaze of the present.
The group show indulges all of the above, but charts a more specific path: the darker side of desire and how it has manifested in the making of erotic objects.
His methodically ordered, almost ceremonial displays of common artefacts convey how collective desires become organized and ritualized through objects - how communication and aspirations are exchanged through the language of design.
He only knows one thing - that is, how to make women the object of his sexual fantasies and desires.
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