Sentences with phrase «perhaps emblematic»

A Columbian artist recently signed by blue chip dealer David Zwirner, he is perhaps emblematic of the current debate.
Mirza's story is perhaps emblematic of what the Hero's Journey should be for game devs in these trying times: specialize, consolidate, then make games an order of magnitude better than what came before.
The city's changes are perhaps emblematic of those of Britain as a whole — with the Church standing, still surprisingly assertively, amid everything.
Here again, the PC games industry — perhaps emblematic of its more pressing struggle to survive over the last decade — has led the way with new business models, or marketing strategies as some prefer to call it.

Not exact matches

Zymeworks» recent winning streak is a sign — perhaps the most emblematic yet — of a revival in the Canadian biotech sector, this time promising more sustainable growth than in the past.
It's perhaps just emblematic of our storied branch - plant economy and the complacent mentality that seems to come with it.
Perhaps even more emblematic of the market opportunity is the adoption by major food companies.
Perhaps the kerfuffle at University of South China is emblematic of the reason why postsecondary education in the United States — despite all its administrative shortcomings and financial crises and political mayhem — has yet to lose its spark.
Since they sold Claude Makélélé to Chelsea in 2003 — perhaps the most emblematic of the headscratching transfer moments, even though he never actually got to extract any on - pitch revenge — Real have won three Spanish titles, two cups and last season's Champions League, and even if it could be argued that a club of their size and standing should have won more, that's still not too bad.
But Ramos has been just as emblematic of this team, and perhaps even just as important.
Fifteen months after Nobel Prize — winning physicist Steven Chu stepped down as secretary of energy, budgetmakers in the U.S. House of Representatives have moved to kill the project perhaps most emblematic of Chu's vision for reshaping research in the Department of Energy (DOE).
Perhaps it's my old English major background surfacing, but I can't help but see the firing / rehiring and test score episodes — and the very creation of the public Michelle Rhee herself — as emblematic of the weaknesses of current school reform.
Perhaps testing is not the lever to pull to improve student learning, considering that low student achievement rates are more emblematic of systemic poverty, racism, and opportunity gaps than the aptitude of a student.
CSX 2000 is emblematic of grass - roots automotive enthusiasm and American entrepreneurship and captures the best of an era — perhaps that's why the auctioneer's tongue got a serious workout last weekend.
How is this story emblematic of the way the Kopps — and, perhaps, many women of the era — were taught to view the world?
But this battle between Hachette and Amazon is perhaps the most emblematic, because Hachette (and Bertelsmann, and other multinationals companies) belongs very much to the old world and own many medias, while Amazon represents the present and the future.
But Mr. Noland's best - known and perhaps most significant achievement was his «Stripes» series of 1967 - 70, horizontal arrangements of bands that held to the emblematic presence he had already established and offered a wide, unbroken viewing expanse that extended the breadth of the stripes and solids without giving (horrors!)
Perhaps the piece most emblematic of Fujiwara's style is «Studio Pietà (King Kong Komplex)».
American Pop art tended to be emblematic, anonymous, and aggressive; English Pop, more subjective and referential, expressed a somewhat romantic view of Pop culture fostered perhaps by England's relative distance from it.
The art of the 20th century included a great many «last paintings,» from Rodchenko to Reinhardt and on, and perhaps just as many «first paintings,» for which the model might be — not least because of its emblematic title — Barnett Newman's Onement, I (1948).
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