Sentences with phrase «over the streets capturing»

Not exact matches

A day after the NFL handed down the harshest penalties ever imposed on a franchise, The MMQB went to Boston to capture the pulse of the city's streets where just over three months ago the Patriots celebrated their Super Bowl XLIX victory with a confetti - strewn parade.
Finally, the camera hovers over a neighborhood, and my friend's eyes light up with wonder as he recognizes streets and the parks, all captured with the precision of satellite photography.
Here are some of my favorite looks worn by women over 40 captured by 40 + Style photographer Denton Taylor on the streets of New York.
After rioting over Google Street View cars accidentally capturing Wi - Fi network details, less than 3 per cent of Germans actually chose to opt out of having their houses on Street View.
The idea that an investor can capture all the benefits of diversification with just a small handful of stocks is a common one and has had numerous proponents over the years (e.g., Ben Graham in The Intelligent Investor; Burton Malkiel in A Random Walk Down Wall Street, etc.).
Based on that epiphany, and the therapy he felt snapping photos of wrinkled faces staring at a legless dude skateboarding down the streets of Paris, he began a photography project called «The Rolling Expedition,» capturing reactions to him from all over the world.
The PayDay franchise, although primarily a cooperative game, captured the excitement of pulling off a high stakes heist and watching it spill over into the streets as you fight your way to your escape vehicle.
Vibrant and witty, layered and textured, she combines large gesture with tight pattern to create compositions that at once mimic the grand heroic gestures of the postwar painters, while capturing an all - over free spirit found in the graffiti that appears daily on the streets near her Bushwick studio.
His photographs invoke the former grandeur of the site over different seasons, capturing hints of buried streets and infrastructure now reclaimed by nature.
The eleven artists juxtapose divergent approaches in conversation with each other, reflecting on primal questions consuming artists over the millennia: Elliot Arkin's conceptual use of web - based commerce spins an absurdist view on the commodification of artists; Babette Bloch's stainless steel reassessments of nature and artistic precedent limn positives and negatives through light; Christopher Carroll Calkins's street photography captures moments of under - the - radar narratives; Valentina DuBasky's acrylic and marble dust works on paper and plaster are a contemporary comment on the prehistory of art; Gabriel Ferrer's performance - like in - the - moment sumi - ink drawings on handmade paper reflect on memory and personal narrative; Christopher Gallego's realist, pure light - filled oil painting elevates the ordinariness of an artist's space to visual poetry; Ana Golici, in pergamano and collage, takes inspiration from 17th Century female naturalist, entomologist and botanical illustrator Maria Sibylla Merian to explore questions of science, nature and objective truth; Emilie Lemakis's monumental amplification of an ancient Greek krater employs scale to upend perceptions for the viewer's reconsideration; Mark Mellon's bronzes address the oppositions of movement and stillness; the alchemy of Michael Townsend's uncontrolled poured acrylic paintings equate the properties of materials with the turbulence of the universe; Jessica Daryl Winer's engagement with luminous color and choreographic line reflects in visual resonance the sonic history of a musical instrument.
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