White Paintings, Black Paintings, and Red Paintings In 1951, Rauschenberg produced his monochromatic «White Paintings» - referred to by some art critics as
hypersensitive screens which registered the smallest adjustments in lighting and atmosphere on their surface, and by sceptics as blank canvases.
However, one commentator said that»... rather than thinking of them as destructive reductions, it might be more productive to see them, as John Cage did, as
hypersensitive screens — what Cage suggestively described as «airports of the lights, shadows and particles.»
Not exact matches
Like the Galaxy S 4, the Mega 6.3 includes an
hypersensitive display, and you can see a tiny light follow your hovering finger around the lock
screen.