Sentences with phrase «poetic potential»

The «working out dramatically,» of course, suggests the great poetic potential of southern religion, as we see in THE APOSTLE and TENDER MERCIES, for example.
Multiplicity was an international survey of artworks sharing an interest in the politics and poetic potential of contemporary urban environments and exposing the irresistible pull of the similarities — intercultural meeting points, common problems, goals and dreams — around which people converge.
Even in comparatively conventional mode, Bill Morrison's work still benefits from the poetic potential of nature's repossession of its own elements.
Removed from the mechanism and components that comprise their intact timepieces, the blank clock faces suggested a poetic potential and a vacant stage for activity.
Through videos and objects she explores the poetic potential of established order of things and image uses.
Unraveling canvas into discrete strands by hand, he paints each deconstructed string individually and then weaves the strands back together in a labor - intensive fashion that harnesses the poetic potential of loss and renewal.
Imbuing his paintings, drawings, prints, and photographs with the poetic potential of geometry, light, and color, Scully has created nuanced blocks of color for more than 30 years that evoke distinct, personal moods, from exuberant to somber, all within a disciplined abstract vocabulary.
Unlike some non-representational works that offer only a chaotic collection of mark - making, Mason's paintings contain a literate cohesion in their passages, a sense of invitation and poetic potential.
The artists present everyday materials as artworks, mine recognizable images for their poetic potential, and take their art to the streets.
Often printed on the grand scale of a history painting — exhibited either as backlit lightboxes akin to advertising displays or as crisp ink jet and silver gelatin prints — Wall's works reveal their poetic potential through portraying empathetic characters, picturing impossible vantage points, and capturing elusive moments.
Stephen Cripps» works developed out of an interest in kinetic sculpture and machines, and a fascination for the poetic potential of explosion and destruction.
She acquired all of them, identifying the poetic potential and a vacant stage for activity on the blank clock faces, which were amputated from the mechanism and components, she started a series of works that evolved across her travels.
The artist's stubborn involvement with the poetic potential of the mundane is similar to the child who receives a gift and pays attention only to the packaging: their unstrained gaze focus on the shapes that naturally intrigues them - the toy and the box are no different.
This had an immeasurable impact: she continues to be fascinated by exposed architecture, a key motif in her work, along with a committed exploration of the poetic potential of urban ruins.
ALEXANDER GRAY ASSOCIATES The poetic potential of scrap metal has long occupied another African - American artist: the veteran sculptor Melvin Edwards, who works in upstate New York but also keeps a studio in Dakar, Senegal.
Voice Choices, «The ruling class: Seeking the poetic potential of neutral signs / Logical Conclusions».»
The poetic potential of this interstitial space was crucial for Rilke and it is similarly central to the work of Elizabeth McAlpine.
The poetic potential of this interstitial space was crucial for... Read more»
But in thinking of the waster not as an object but instead as a process, «Wasters» explores the poetic potential of the recycling of forms.
Currently on view at Anton Kern Gallery, New York is a solo exhibition by Brazilian artist Marepe, presenting a group of seven sculptures made of common objects and put together with great formal rigor and poetic potential.
The show presents 12 new sculptures which explore the poetic potential of a functional object, specifically an ordinary table.
Each artist, in their own way, beautifully demonstrates that the poetic potential of light remains an enduring area of artistic inspiration and experimentation.
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