Sentences with phrase «more graphic representation»

Not exact matches

While it may smack as blasphemy to seasoned presenters, research has shown that individuals exposed to a graphic representation of a message pay more attention to it, agree more with it, and better recall it compared with people shown a bulleted list of text.
If you want to learn how to read the «graphic representation» of human psychology on the charts as mentioned by Al Weiss in his quote above, as well as more about the principles discussed today, checkout my price action trading course and traders community.
All the more so since that initial reduction leads easily to another — namely, the reduction of three - dimensional realities to two dimensions (for example, a «plan,» a blank sheet of paper, something drawn on paper, a map, or any kind of graphic representation or projection).»
A graphic representation of the Lie group E8 reveals a symmetric structure far more complicated than the human genome.
But as I recall this was done after the ebook was a sensation, so people could read it on a plane without being embarrassed by a more, er, graphic representation of the plot.
For starters, on the box, the graphic representation of the game along with the title takes up significantly more space than the number, which is different.
Featuring more than 100 works spanning from the early 1980s to the present, including a number of new and never - before - seen pieces, the exhibition juxtaposes graphic patterns with abstracted, figurative paintings, creating a fully immersive environment that underscores the artist's systematic dismantling of the hierarchy between design and fine art, and between three - dimensional form and two - dimensional representation.
The Wayland Rudd Collection exhibition examines representations of Africans in Soviet culture during this time, taking as its departure point more than 200 images including paintings, movie stills, posters and graphics from the collection of New York - based, Moscow - born artist Yevgeniy Fiks.
Lacing Action painting and Color Field painting with a postmodern twist, Zimmermann's abstract motifs seem to spring from more figurative representations: he uses computer graphics and «dithering» (a technique that displays images without firm edges so as to give a more colorful appearance) to deform images, texts and signs from his own massive archive of images, evoking the atlases of Gerhard Richter and Aby Warburg.
More recent titles include «Glenn Ligon: Encounters and Collisions» and «Glenn Ligon: A People on the Cover,» which explores representation of black people on book covers, analyzing the use of photography, typography, and graphics.
a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z