Sentences with phrase «particularly in the later works»

Van Gogh's true descendants may well be found here, particularly in the later works of the Belgian expressionist Constant Permeke (1886 - 1952), painted when he lived in Jabbeke.

Not exact matches

As for what Deming and company are looking for, she suggests the program is particularly interested in working with startups that are committed to addressing late - onset medical conditions relating to Alzheimer's, heart disease, diabetes and more.
This will come back onto play only in the late twentieth century, particularly in the work of Jürgen Moltmann.
Some new moods in theology that appeared in the early sixties appealed to Bonhoeffer's later works, particularly the Letters and Papers from Prison.
By contrast, Merleau - Ponty's later worksparticularly Eye and Mind, certain essays in Signs, and especially The Visible and the Invisible — abandon these distinctions as primary «The problems posed in Ph.P.
just before I went to sit in the Letterman green room, my fantastically courageous and brilliant friend Nell Scovell published this article in Vanity Fair about the unfriendly attitude toward women writers in late - night - tv and particularly the hostile work environment at (you guessed it) good ol' Dave's.
That'll have to wait for some later election, however, as I'm bound in Europe working on other stuff... Till then, I'll stalk the campaigns via coverage from the usual sources, I've grown particularly fond of the Financial Times «Richard McGregor, who reports a lot from the ground and pays attention to campaign mechanics like few other journalists, and of course continue to follow Sasha Issenberg's great work at Slate.com and various stuff from TechPresident to keep up on the technology side of things.
Rodriguez later responded: «While we obviously do not agree on every issue — particularly his stances on abortion and the rights of the LGBTQ community — I know Sen. Ruben Diaz Sr. has been a strong advocate for Latino representation and his working class constituents in the Bronx.
If you're thinking of working in industry later on, a Ph.D. partly or fully funded by a company, particularly if it includes a placement or opportunity to conduct part of your project in your sponsor's labs, will give you an edge.
Director Jonathan Teplitzky (Getting» Square), writer Frank Cottrell Boyce (Tristram Shandy: A Cock and Bull Story) and producer turned co-scribe Andy Patterson (Burning Man) adapt Eric Lomax's autobiography of the same name into a consideration of closure and catharsis, as focused on the juxtaposition of the young Lomax's (Jeremy Irvine, Great Expectations) experiences in a Japanese prisoner - of - war camp, working on the Thai - Burma Railway in cruel conditions, and the elder Lomax's (Colin Firth, Tinker Tailor Soldier Spy) troubles when attempting to cope, particularly on the occasion of his marriage to the sympathetic Patti (Nicole Kidman, Stoker) decades later.
The sexuality might be a little less subtextual (though there's nothing explicit here), but the testy, shifting power plays in the relationship between Tom and Frances, which serves as the heart of the film, bring to mind a contemporary update of Highsmith's work, albeit seen through Dolan's lens, making it of a piece with his earlier films, particularly once Sarah (Evelyne Brochu), the co-worker posing as the late Guillaume's girlfriend, arrives on the scene to complicate things further.
The film works well for the most part, focusing on Victoria's romance with Albert and her learning how to wield what power she has, and there's relatively little melodramatization of history (though a late sequence with Albert getting shot in an assassination stands out as particularly ridiculous).
The reference is just the latest example of the Bush Institute's ongoing work to gain traction and inspire action, particularly on improving the condition in North Korea.
If you need the latest advice and ideas on how to promote your work, particularly in using on - line marketing, it's an excellent class.
Once the boiling happens, we may say crazy things we regret later and all hopes of making progress — particularly in a work setting — dramatically decrease.
Andrew Burbidge: We have looked in Australia at biological control of foxes and rabbits and house mice at various times, particularly in the late»80s and»90s, there was work done within CSIRO, funded by the federal government, to see whether you could develop the idea of immuno - contraception.
Under the faithful editorial leadership of Chris Remo, veteran game site Shacknews has been positively resurgent of late, and I particularly liked the new feature «EVE Online: The Bears and the Rat», written by Nick Breckon, and the second in a series of features analyzing the exquisite skullduggery at work in CCP's PC MMO.
The new camera angle (more on this exceptional piece of work later) really amplifies the intensity of battles in God of War Particularly in the boss fights.
Work from the late 1920s includes ten paintings from 1928 — a particularly prolific year for the artist, when he lived in Paris and had his first solo exhibition in a Left Bank gallery.
In this melding of oppression and self - investigation — particularly in her attention to environmental illness — Frazier's work recalls that of British photographer Jo Spence, who charted her own position within a rigid class system and, later, her status as a cancer patienIn this melding of oppression and self - investigation — particularly in her attention to environmental illness — Frazier's work recalls that of British photographer Jo Spence, who charted her own position within a rigid class system and, later, her status as a cancer patienin her attention to environmental illness — Frazier's work recalls that of British photographer Jo Spence, who charted her own position within a rigid class system and, later, her status as a cancer patient.
He is at work on an art history dissertation at Columbia University, focusing on questions of identity and difference in art of the late 1980s and early 1990s, particularly in relation to the AIDS crisis.
The minor miracle of the show is the late burst of color and texture in the recent work, such as the dense patterning and thick impasto of Joe's Joy (in which the fascination with quilts is particularly evident).
From the time of his arrival in New York in 1942, Cage was engaged in a deep intellectual exchange with artists in this circle — particularly Robert Motherwell (1915 — 1991)-- and participated in discussions and presented lectures at the Subjects of the Artist school and later at the Club.22 However, by the time Cage and Rauschenberg began work on Automobile Tire Print, Cage had articulated a sharp turn away from the ethos of the Club, specifically rejecting what Caroline A. Jones has described as the model of «the artist as a masculine solitary whose staunchly heterosexual libido drove his brush.»
The 1951 three - panel White Painting is believed to have been painted over almost immediately as Untitled [matte black triptych](ca. 1951, fig. 2).6 In fact, there is no exhibition history or any other evidence to indicate that White Painting [three panel] was extant between 1951 and 1968; 7 in those years, most of the original White Paintings had slipped out of existence, their canvases used as the supports for other pieces.8 Though artists throughout history have created new works on used canvases, Rauschenberg did so with an unusual frequency and ease, particularly in the early 1950s.9 Looking back at that period some ten years later, he commented, «Today I wouldn't do that..In fact, there is no exhibition history or any other evidence to indicate that White Painting [three panel] was extant between 1951 and 1968; 7 in those years, most of the original White Paintings had slipped out of existence, their canvases used as the supports for other pieces.8 Though artists throughout history have created new works on used canvases, Rauschenberg did so with an unusual frequency and ease, particularly in the early 1950s.9 Looking back at that period some ten years later, he commented, «Today I wouldn't do that..in those years, most of the original White Paintings had slipped out of existence, their canvases used as the supports for other pieces.8 Though artists throughout history have created new works on used canvases, Rauschenberg did so with an unusual frequency and ease, particularly in the early 1950s.9 Looking back at that period some ten years later, he commented, «Today I wouldn't do that..in the early 1950s.9 Looking back at that period some ten years later, he commented, «Today I wouldn't do that....
Later he became particularly known for bold abstracts in a cubist - influenced idiom, tending eventually toward abstract expressionism, the style in which he worked from about the 1950s until his death.
British mania for Rembrandt's work, particularly his portraits and landscapes, reached fever pitch in the late 18th century, but it had been evolving for over two centuries before that.
Conner was particularly productive with photography during the late 1970s when he shot a body of work featuring bright color images (in contrast to his frequent use of black and white) of punk bands performing at the legendary Mabuhay Gardens in S.F..
Later in the year, the Barbican takes a peek inside the laboratory of iconic designers Ray and Charles Eames, while the V&A investigates the photography of Julia Margaret Cameron — particularly her relationship with the museum's founding director, Sir Henry Cole, who presented the first exhibition of her work (October and November).
Like the Hollywood disaster movies made in the same era, his work hints at catastrophe, particularly the later paintings made by graphic artists using the glossy airbrush technique that then pervaded popular culture.
While the exhibition emphasizes Hofmann's drawings from the 1930s and»40s, there are a few highly suggestive late works in the exhibition, particularly several untitled pieces from 1961 in which the artist contrasts a few seemingly carefree drips and spatters of richly hued oil paint with delicate felt - marker traceries.
While my early works were framed in drawings and paintings that borrowed forms from traditional print media, I later began to blur the boundary between my public and private «character» through social media, particularly Twitter.
Two sections focus on architecture; «Architecture and Design: New trends in the Eighties and Nineties» is a general overview of the architectural scene in late 20th century, particularly in Europe and the Far East, while another section is specifically dedicated to the work of Japanese architect Kengo Kuma.
Classical references persisted in his later work, particularly in the form of Bacchus, the god of wine.
Pablo Picasso was also thought to have expressed a type of automatic drawing in his later work, and particularly in his etchings and lithographic suites of the 1960s.
This collection is particularly strong in the works of Monet: five great Monet landscapes spanning thirty years are featured, from views of the French countryside to one of his late immersive representations of water lilies, Le Bassin aux Nymphéas of 1919.
This volume is a compilation of representative photographs from each series of works in Struth's oeuvre: street photographs from the 1970s and «80s; empathetic portraits (particularly of families); large - format «museum photographs»; nature studies; jungle photographs (New Pictures from Paradise); and, from the latest series, images from the world of science.
His subject matter was not chosen as particularly suitable for formal experiments in abstraction: in his late works «he continued to explore visual perception, natural phenomena, modern life, the course of history and the social and ethical contexts that determine the endeavours of mankind».
Yet recently in «Refurbished Reputation for a Nervy Painter,» Holland Cotter in The New York Times, breaking with the usual assessments of his work, firmly demands that we take a second look, particularly at his later painting.
While William Burroughs is primarily remembered for his prolific writing career and influence on the Beat Generation, he also worked extensively as a visual artist, particularly later in life.
One of Paik's first altered televisions, originally made in 1963, it is particularly beautiful, as minimal as his later work is maximal.
He will discuss the role of collaboration in his practice, particularly in relation to his latest body of work.
His fascination with architecture, particularly the Chrysler Building in New York, would also be evidenced later when art deco motifs began to appear in his works.
Because of Mr.Rauschenberg's friendship with staff and benefactors of the SFMOMA, particularly the late philanthropist and collector Phyllis Wattis, the museum in the late 1990s secured a range of early works from the artist's own collection.
The European collection of the Dallas Museum of Art is particularly strong in late 19th - and early 20th - century works, with the most significant collection of French impressionism and post-impressionism in the region.
Later in the Autumn IMMA launches IMMA Collection: Freud Project, 2016 — 2021; a significant selection of 50 works by Lucian Freud (1922 - 2011), regarded as one of the world's greatest realist painters, which are on long - term loan to the IMMA Collection; Europa, the first survey exhibition of Palestinian artist Emily Jacir's work in Ireland which brings together almost two decades of sculpture, film, drawings, large - scale installations and photography with a focus on Jacir's work in Europe, particularly Italy and the Mediterranean.
Although there is a terrific late -»60s painting by Robert Bechtle (a white man at the door of a white T - Bird in front of a white stucco house), an impressive Schnabelesque painting by the African painter Ouattara and some big sculptures by Kos (a meditation on the largest bell in the world), Ireland («Ex Cathedra,» a giant white chair) and Jonathan Borofsky (his ubiquitous «Hammering Man»), the greatest pleasures will be found among smaller works, particularly works on paper.
I see the attraction for abstract painters, particularly of late Matisse planes of colour, but to me it only really works because of figurative prompts of depth and the tension of its depiction in 2 - D.
There and in Cologne, she saw up close a vibrant painting scene, particularly through the work of Immendorff, Albert Oehlen, and the late Martin Kippenberger, whose «anarchistic approaches to painting,» she recalls, «really rocked my understanding of what painting can do — this idea that it's not just a nicey - nice thing but that it could actually be aggressive.»
Since the late 1990s, the New York - based artist has been working at the intersection of body and image, particularly in the form of video.
This keeps her on her toes and up to date with the latest theories and developments in the counselling field, particularly in relation to working with couples and in her capacity as a Couples Therapy trainer
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