Sentences with phrase «investigate objects in space»

Not exact matches

«Other spectroscopic instruments have flown in space before but none have had this programmable multi-object capability that enables observation of up to 100 objects simultaneously, which means much more scientific investigating can get done in less time.
How is the spacing of objects (which you investigated in this activity using flip - books) important when making one of these other types of animations?
By manipulating, deconstructing and distorting the architecture and objects as represented in glossy magazine, Rachel Wrigley's collages attempt to invent new forms; providing a distorted version of reality by investigating space as a moveable, impermanent fixture.
In a fourth and final post from New Frontier at Sundance, Nettrice Gaskins investigates «augmented space» — the technologies, objects, or symbols that overlay physical space with information.
Line as Object investigates the artist's unrivalled engagement with the problems of form and space - using light, shadow, scale and gravity in a constant process of discovery.
For more than twenty years the artist has been using varied means and various types of objects — including lamps, fabrics, wax, wood and mirrors — to investigate the architectural space, the nature of materials in abstract forms and the reception of the spectator in contact with them.
For more than twenty years the artist has been using varied means and various types of objects - including lamps, fabrics, wax, wood and mirrors - to investigate the architectural space, the nature of materials in abstract forms and the reception of the spectator in contact with them.
The exhibition will also feature pieces by John Baldessari, whose works would often draw viewer's attention to minor details, absences or the spaces between things; Alfredo Jaar, multidisciplinary artists best known for his installation works; John McCracken, whose monochromatic sculptures explore the relationship between objects and their surrounding spaces; Bruce Nauman, whose conceptual works conceptual works that explore space, language, and the body; Lorna Simpson, whose photo - conceptualist works investigate the relationship between image and text; and Vassilakis Takis, a kinetic artist who uses electromagnetism to suspend human beings and objects in space.
I want to investigate the abstract «image» as something equivalent to an observed object in space.
The artist has gained recent attention; having been relatively forgotten since Chillida's Guggenheim exhibition in 1980, and represents a now familiar European Post-war sculpture; with works investigating form, space, and material usage in sculptural practice, site - specific, weighty objects reflecting architecture and nature, here seemingly taken a little out of context.
Researchers have investigated the role of «placemaking» in relationships, seeking to understand how objects in a home reflect and represent the couple that resides in that space.1 In a study published in the journal Personal Relationships, researchers asked partners who were married, or couples that were not married but cohabiting, to list objects in their homes and note whether each item was acquired by a particular partner individually («that's my ’59 Fender Stratocaster and your first edition of Darwin's Origin of Species»), or whether the couple had acquired it together («our collection of vintage pornography»; see this post for more on language use and relationshipsin relationships, seeking to understand how objects in a home reflect and represent the couple that resides in that space.1 In a study published in the journal Personal Relationships, researchers asked partners who were married, or couples that were not married but cohabiting, to list objects in their homes and note whether each item was acquired by a particular partner individually («that's my ’59 Fender Stratocaster and your first edition of Darwin's Origin of Species»), or whether the couple had acquired it together («our collection of vintage pornography»; see this post for more on language use and relationshipsin a home reflect and represent the couple that resides in that space.1 In a study published in the journal Personal Relationships, researchers asked partners who were married, or couples that were not married but cohabiting, to list objects in their homes and note whether each item was acquired by a particular partner individually («that's my ’59 Fender Stratocaster and your first edition of Darwin's Origin of Species»), or whether the couple had acquired it together («our collection of vintage pornography»; see this post for more on language use and relationshipsin that space.1 In a study published in the journal Personal Relationships, researchers asked partners who were married, or couples that were not married but cohabiting, to list objects in their homes and note whether each item was acquired by a particular partner individually («that's my ’59 Fender Stratocaster and your first edition of Darwin's Origin of Species»), or whether the couple had acquired it together («our collection of vintage pornography»; see this post for more on language use and relationshipsIn a study published in the journal Personal Relationships, researchers asked partners who were married, or couples that were not married but cohabiting, to list objects in their homes and note whether each item was acquired by a particular partner individually («that's my ’59 Fender Stratocaster and your first edition of Darwin's Origin of Species»), or whether the couple had acquired it together («our collection of vintage pornography»; see this post for more on language use and relationshipsin the journal Personal Relationships, researchers asked partners who were married, or couples that were not married but cohabiting, to list objects in their homes and note whether each item was acquired by a particular partner individually («that's my ’59 Fender Stratocaster and your first edition of Darwin's Origin of Species»), or whether the couple had acquired it together («our collection of vintage pornography»; see this post for more on language use and relationshipsin their homes and note whether each item was acquired by a particular partner individually («that's my ’59 Fender Stratocaster and your first edition of Darwin's Origin of Species»), or whether the couple had acquired it together («our collection of vintage pornography»; see this post for more on language use and relationships).
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