Sentences with phrase «modern digital culture»

He suggests that the original novelty of these unconventional drawing processes has begun to wear off, and he explores their new situation in our modern digital culture and digital art.

Not exact matches

FMG includes news and lifestyle English - language cable network FUSION TV, and a collection of leading digital brands that span a range of categories: technology (Gizmodo), sports (Deadspin), music (TrackRecord), lifestyle (Lifehacker), modern women's interests (Jezebel), news and politics (Splinter), African American news and culture (The Root), gaming (Kotaku), and car culture (Jalopnik).
Lanthimos is keenly homed in on the sins of the modern digital era, constantly questioning whether an online culture of over-sharing and carefully cultivated identities is resulting in humans automating themselves.
Writing in the foreword to the report Minister of State for Digital and Culture, Matt Hancock, said: «Digital skills are as important as numeracy and literacy in the modern world and we must ensure that our children are given the opportunity to develop the understanding they will need as they grow up.
A culture that delivers real impact with modern digital learning.
2017 Past Skin, MoMA PS1, The Museum of Modern Art, New York, NY Invisible Cities, The Wallach Art Gallery at Columbia University, NY Mundos Alternos: Art and Science Fiction in the Americas, «Pacific Standard Time», UCR / California Museum of Photography, Riverside, CA COMM ALT SHIFT, Aljira A Center for Contemporary Art, Newark, NJ Biennale of Moving Images, Faena Bazaar and Faena Hotel, Miami Beach, FL Biennale of Moving Images, Faena Art Center Buenos Aires, Argentina Digital Bodies, Eli and Edythe Broad Art Museum, East Lansing, MI Vision All Together, Durango Arts Center, Durango, COSouth Florida Consortium Exhibition, Museum of Contemporary Art, North Miami, FL South Florida Consortium Exhibition, Museum of Contemporary Art, North Miami, FL Prospect 4: The Lotus in Spite of the Swamp, New Orleans Biennial, New Orleans, LA No burden as heavy, David Castillo Gallery, Miami Beach, FL Change Agents, Art and Culture Center of Hollywood, Hollywood, FL
Most importantly perhaps, the exhibition reveals the «occult» as a modern cultural phenomenon, something that persisted through the 20th century's sharp turn to technology and rational materialism, contributed greatly to the rise of popular and counter culture, and which continues today in the digital world.
«Analyzing the vast field of digital data, American contemporary artist Jason Salavon contributes to the exploration of modern culture, obsessions and mannerisms through the display of his latest work.
2012 «Light Darkness and Shadow: Art and the Meaning of Life», Huffpost Culture, 11 December «Review: Tim Noble & Sue Webster Nihilistic Optimistic, Blain Southern», Kentish Towner, 6 November Mark Sinclair, «Nihilism, optimism and bedtime tales», Creative Review, 1 November Martin Coomer, «Tim Noble and Sue Webster: Nihilistic Optimistic», TimeOut: London, 29 October «Where to buy... Tim Noble and Sue Webster», The Week, 27 October Amy Dawson, «Art Review», The Metro, 24 October Rachel Campbell - Johnston, «Exhibitions: Critic» s Choice», The Times, 20 October Lia Chavez, «A Glimpse at Splitting, Multiplying Universes: Frieze London 2012 Highlights», Huffpost Arts & Culture, 17 October «Arts Agenda: The cultural highlights you have to see», I Newspaper, 16 October «Tim Noble and Sue Webster exhibition: We and Our Shadows», Evening Standard, 16 October Rob Alderson, «Amazing Silhouette Sculptures by Tim Noble and Sue Webster on show in London», It» s Nice That, 16 October Waldemar Januszczak, «Magic Lurks in the Shadows», The Sunday Times, 14 October Emma O'Kelly, «Nihilistic Optimistic by Tim Noble and Sue Webster, Blain Southern Gallery», Wallpaper, 10 October Colin Gleadell, «The best anti-Frieze in London», The Daily Telegraph, 9 October Jon Savage, «Frieze Week: Tim Noble & Sue Webster», Dazed Digital, 8 October Kate Kellaway, «Interview with Tim Noble & Sue Webster», The Observer, 7 October Rachel Campbell - Johnston, «Critics Choice», The Times, 6 October Lynn Barber, «The Dark Arts», The Sunday Times, 30 September Charlotte Cripps, «Bringing art to the Charts», The Independent, 29 September «Modern Life is Rubbish», The Art Newspaper, October John B. Henderson, «Chess», The Scotsman, 18 September Tim Walker, «Observations: Chess is the name of the game in a new London show», The Independent, 4 September Liz Stinson, «Artists Turn Junk Into Amazing Silhouettes», Wired, 6 July «Tim and Sue», Hunger, Summer «Tim Noble, Sue Webster and David Adjaye in Coversation with Louisa Buck», Garage Mag Online, 25 May
Prison and the disciplinary society, Byron as a modern day celebrity, the digital and agricultural commons, culture after transatlantic slavery, and the legacies of «68 and Nottingham's radical past, were examined in projects at an Elizabethan hall, an empty shop, a unique medieval village, Byron's ancestral home and a former prison.
The Irish Museum of Modern Art and the Goethe Institut present Lunch Bytes, an exciting new series of critical discussions that explore art and digital culture.
Through her collaborations with visual artists (including Arthur Jafa, Shani Crowe, Mickalene Thomas, and Rashaad Newsome); her engagement with the work of other talents like Lynette Yiadom - Boakye, who inspired the aesthetics of A Seat at the Table; and her push into some of the art world's most revered spaces (her digital artwork, Seventy States, was shown at the Tate Modern in response to its «Soul of a Nation» exhibition this year), Solange has emerged as a cross-disciplinary artist who is committed to pushing her practice into exhilarating new realms and breaking down the barrier between art and popular culture.
As Tate Modern prepares for tomorrow's launch of its major retrospective into one of the great American artists of the twentieth century, Roy Lichtenstein, digital arts channel The Space has unveiled an Arts Council archive film about the Pop Art master during which he explains that his work doesn't celebrate Pop culture, but uses its banality to reflect a harsh materialistic society.
03 Mar 2014 Series of discussions exploring art and digital culture at IMMA The Irish Museum of Modern Art and the Goethe Institut present Lunch Bytes, an exciting new series of critical discussions that explore art and digital culture.
New York, NY About Blog From the concert stage to the dressing room, from the recording studio to the digital realm, SPIN surveys the modern musical landscape and the culture around it with reporting, interviews, and a discerning critical ear.
About Blog From the concert stage to the dressing room, from the recording studio to the digital realm, SPIN surveys the modern musical landscape and the culture around it with reporting, interviews, and a discerning critical ear.
About Blog - From the concert stage to the dressing room, from the recording studio to the digital realm, SPIN surveys the modern musical landscape and the culture around it with reporting, interviews, and a discerning critical ear.
This presentation locates infidelity within the broader social context of modern marriage, the digital culture, sexuality, and monogamy.
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