Sentences with phrase «in odd juxtapositions»

All the works have a dark, steampunk aesthetic and are well composed, intriguing in their odd juxtapositions of things like burnished steel columns, clunky ceramic doughnuts, discarded coffee cups, buttons, a brown paper bag, work gloves, a petrified lime, and so on.
I am inspired by pop culture, current events, and find humor in the odd juxtapositions that often inform my art.

Not exact matches

But language is what the poet has to work with, and so the poet is forced to take sometimes exaggerated, sometimes extreme steps to pierce the mundane, breaking up lines, using words in odd new contexts, relying on sound effects and packing the stanzas with sensuous images and fragments from scripture, and the common language of faith suddenly takes on new meaning through these odd juxtapositions.
I hadn't planned to wear them together, but I happened to have the jacket in my suitcase and I liked the odd juxtaposition of camouflage with sheer ballerina pink tiers.
The juxtaposition might seem odd on occasion, but like the film in general, it's proof that Pixar refuses to go on autopilot, pushing its artists into new, and sometimes quite rewarding, terrain.»
Last week in the span of 36 hours I was confronted with the oddest juxtaposition of visual images; in total, a poignant manifestation of powerful events gripping our country.
In fact the SLR is decidedly busy, an odd juxtaposition when the lochs we pass are so still.
All are welcomed and stand in stark juxtaposition to the Viper's still simple cornerstones, including steel brakes, hydraulically assisted steering, side - exit exhaust pipes that burn your calves as you exit the car, and a naturally aspirated 645 - hp, 8.4 - liter, odd - firing V - 10 that's a Neanderthal among today's advanced turbocharged engines.
Meanwhile, they splay their back legs.This odd juxtaposition keeps the cat from spinning in the air the whole time they're falling.Only after righting its front half does the cat bring around its back legs to land first on its front paws and then on its hind paws while arching its back.
Although these works have their origins in commercial merchandising, the goods — cereal boxes, plastic action figures, and lava lamps, for example — are transformed by the artist's odd and often humorous juxtapositions.
In his oeuvre, singular symbols and images seem odd and disturbing; upon further study, queer juxtapositions emerge from the buzz of images.
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