Sentences with phrase «idiosyncratic language»

Though working through multiple mediums, Torkwase Dyson describes herself as a painter who uses distilled geometric abstraction to create an idiosyncratic language that is both diagrammatic and expressive.
The selected works reflect a shared interest in figuration, social conduct, familial relations, the efficacy of communication, and drawing as a personal and idiosyncratic language.
A member of the Brazilian Neo-Concrete Movement, Willys de Castro created a diverse and idiosyncratic language of forms that fluctuated between two and three - dimensional space.
Torkwase Dyson is a painter who uses distilled geometric abstraction to create an idiosyncratic language.
This is written in a largely idiosyncratic language, consisting of a mixture of standard English lexical items and neologistic multilingual puns and portmanteau words, which attempts to recreate the experience of sleep and dreams.
Using an idiosyncratic language of found materials he engages with themes of exoticism, tourism and cultural commodification.
Torkwase Dyson is a painter who uses distilled geometric abstraction to create an idiosyncratic language that is both diagrammatic and expressive.
From her early collections of mock burial artefacts, to primate - like figures constructed from discarded fur coats, and her more recent enigmatic gurus, Upritchard has developed a highly idiosyncratic language of sculpture that frequently borrows from craft practices and a broad range of references from the deep recesses of museum collections, folklore and counter-cultures to high modernist design.
A key figure of Australian art since the mid-1980s, Linda Marrinon has developed an idiosyncratic language of figurative painting and sculpture that merges contemporary cartoons with neoclassic tropes of the nude, reclining figure, and bust or standing portrait.
A key figure in Australian art since the mid-1980s, Linda Marrinon has developed an idiosyncratic language of painting and drawing steeped in postmodernist irony and feminist wit.

Not exact matches

IBM's megacomputer, Watson, creamed the hominid competition at the quirky, punny, idiosyncratic Jeopardy! This contest, calling on such skills as language, grammar, and wordplay, is among the most human of games — much more so than the mathematical system of chess, which IBM's Deep Blue mastered in the 1990s.
Seeing Wiseau's idiosyncratic delivery and body language in moody widescreen compositions is more than a little discombobulating, and given that he's being deployed as a supporting player, I'm in.
Yet both are the work of a highly idiosyncratic filmmaker, his strong command of cinematic language elevating them above the status of filmed plays.
These essays — on Fassbinder, the 1975 New York Film Festival, Taxi Driver, and Jeanne Dielman — found Farber at the peak of his powers, blessed with one of the most distinctive (and idiosyncratic) voices in English - language film criticism.
The ground - level focus — the story is framed by two civilian women who witness Superman and Rogol Zaar's fight on the streets of Metropolis — the idiosyncratic dialogue («He doesn't look like Superman without the shorts»), the self - aware callouts of comic book clichés («In this language, I believe they call it stalling»); even in a short story, it's pure Bendis.
Send us fiction with strong, idiosyncratic voices, creative nonfiction that honestly and eloquently strips all pretenses away, and poetry that uses language with power and precision.
Dogs use body language for 80 % of their communication, so it's no wonder they view our strange idiosyncratic human tendencies with confusion.
Butler writes: «At first glance, the paintings convey a sense of joy, in the same way that Paul Klee's idiosyncratic visual language does.
Within two decades, she exchanged the language of classical sculpture with an idiosyncratic lexicon of new shapes, unusual materials, processes and themes that held a dialogue with the contemporary art scene and her own biography.
They harness the visual language of both Minimalism and assemblage, but transcend the boundaries of these movements and become idiosyncratic depictions of an interior world.
His idiosyncratic practice is about getting inside and exploring this space like a language of his own — somewhere between drawing, painting, and sculpture and between subject, image, and form.
Her sculptures, which she has said «interweave time and space and navigate information in idiosyncratic ways that search for something that is outside of language,» can be seen as the starting point and primary source for her painting.
It's not just those unexpected, disorienting camera angles and giant wall - to - ceiling projections he favors, but the dizzying spectrum of cinematic languages he incorporates into his own idiosyncratic idiom (from silent comedy, via vintage Hollywood, to the most rarefied avant - garde experimentation).
Chamberlain's idiosyncratic approach to titling is indebted to the often quite abstract ways in which these writers interacted with language and, more specifically, with quotidian words, not only as referent but also as sound and mood.
His works are recognised for their enigmatic pictorial language, organic palette and materials, and idiosyncratic and expressive style.
His work combined subversive and playful aspects of Dada and Surrealism with an idiosyncratic use of Minimalism's refined visual language.
Simulated realities in the astonishing precision of Old Masters: with his computer the Aachen artist Tim Berresheim generates idiosyncratic scenarios in a visual language which emerges from the tension between computer technology and a questioning exploration of reality.
«Germaine Richier» will explore the daring ways in which Richier's art bridges the tradition of classical figurative sculpture with an idiosyncratic visual language born of an anguished, searching, and, ultimately, spiritual post-World War psyche.
By interrogating the essential tensions underpinning existence and exploring the emotive properties of colour, Azadeh Razaghdoost creates a truly poetic and idiosyncratic visual language at the confluence of life's most fundamental impulses.
«I have attempted to invent a personal and idiosyncratic visual language in which consideration of both the history of Abstraction, and the traditions of Figural Painting are of equal and essential concern.
About Jorinde Voigt: Jorinde Voigt (b. 1977, Germany) has developed an idiosyncratic visual language with her meticulous, large - format drawings that present a quasi abstract code of signs that seems deeply subjective and individual but nonetheless subject to strict rules.
Mining a visual aesthetic reminiscent of German Expressionist film, with Three Sisters Bock develops his own language and artistic vocabulary to create an emotional and highly idiosyncratic world in which connections are made between language, the built environment, and the individuals who inhabit it.
On view in the main gallery are sculptures executed between 2015 and 2018 that show off Shechet's idiosyncratic visual language.
At Time Out New York Anne Doran reports that Matt Connors, in his second solo show at Canada, continues to develop his idiosyncratic painterly language.
Sebastian began in the traditional mode of nudes and portraits, and moved onto more personal work that deals with themes of income inequality and climate change, using an idiosyncratic visual language he has been slowly developing for the past five years.
Philip Guston is a painter's painter: uninhibited by prevailing movements and continuously pursuing his own language of representation he has managed to move between abstraction and his own idiosyncratic forms of representation with a freedom few artists possess.
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