Sentences with phrase «poetic visions»

Best known for her imaginary environments which recall poetic visions, her installations evoke places of loss or transformation.
Freud discriminated, scientifically, where Jung religiously embraced everything, an equal - opportunity appropriator of whatever poetic visions «worked».
According to this subtle blend of political doctrine and poetic vision, the function of the French state is to maintain in unity, independence, and prosperity a pre-existing nation with definite features.
But is it not true, nevertheless, that the poetic vision is a form of the mythical vision?
There is a hunger out there for wonder, for understanding, and there are people out there who think that the scientific worldview somehow denies, somehow reduces the poetic vision of the universe, which in its petty, paltry way their religion seems to give them.
With his poetic vision and grasp of the milieu, Sissako has made the essential film about terrorism without a hint of hysterics or didacticism.
The director behind one of the most acclaimed films of the year, A Ghost Story, explains how David Gordon Green's poetic vision of adolescence opened his eyes to the possibilities of cinema.
Lending a monumentality matched by hefty themes of colonialism and South African politics, the six large - scale installations forming the core of this major exhibition offered a poetic vision of our times.
This unique study of the city advanced at The Cooper Union presents a strong picture of a generation's cutting - edge civic activism, poetic vision and concerns about sustainability, which are aptitudes identified with the legacy of this architecture school.
An economist by trade before taking up an acclaimed career in photograhy, the 67 - year - old Brazilian has been taking his poetic vision to every last shore on which human civilisation meets the natural world.
But one person's plop is another's poetic vision, says Guardian art critic Jonathan Jones
«The click of Janice Mehlman,» writes Gian Luigi Corinto in RD» Arte, «is a poetic vision [that] asks of those who look to spend time in order to be capable of seeing the feelings the images transmit.»
Throughout her long career, Helen Levitt's photographs have consistently reflected her poetic vision, humor, and inventiveness as much as they have honestly portrayed her subjects — men, women, and children acting out a daily drama on the sidewalks and stoops of New York City's tenemants.
Uslé's non-representative abstract works aim to communicate a personal and poetic vision of the world rather than narrative.
My own poetic vision of China...
Giorgio Morandi's steady pursuit of a poetic vision in still - life and landscape painting (as well as engravings and etchings) has secured him a singular and revered position in the history of Modern art.
A close friend of Wassily Kandinsky with whom he shared both the experience in the Der Blaue Reiter group and the teaching activity at the Bauhaus, Paul Klee greatly influenced 20th century abstract painting, bequeathing us his original and poetic vision, deeply intertwined with his passion for music.
Through a range of tools, such as video, animation, sculpture, painting, and sound installation, he constructs a complex poetic vision.
He works at the interface of ancient history, metaphysics, the psychosocial aspects of ufology & the politics of aesthetics — all countered with an overpowering poetic vision that has echoes of the wilful extremism of rock n» roll.
They also add a number of considerations that are key to the artist's poetic vision, including the relationship between man and nature, and references to the history of ideas and of Western philosophy.
For her first museum show in Paris, Charlotte Moth — a British artist living in France — continues her exploration of space as architecture and as potential, tendentially transforming history of art into poetic vision.
It's not just a poetic vision.

Not exact matches

Though recent critics applaud Chaucer for being a «nonjudgmental» poet of this world (and thus distinguishable from Dante), Klassen draws attention again to the fact that both Dante and Chaucer are animated by a «poetic of hope» rooted in the beatific vision.
His style is frequently poetic, his methodology like a painter sketching his vision onto a huge canvas.
B, which religions are you talking about when you make the large claim, «In other religions we have no pretense that someone is talking about his own private vision, or that stuff is more or less poetic.
In other religions we have no pretense that someone is talking about his own private vision, or that stuff is more or less poetic.
In this book, then, and especially in the earlier part, I have sometimes resorted to a slight verbal elaboration, either because there was no alternative if one was to write English at all, or because two words seemed necessary to convey the full «poetic» content of one word in the French, or again because a verbal elaboration seemed more likely to communicate the colour (and colour is of the essence of vision) of the original.
Markos offers a hope for a renewed vision of the wholeness of truth whereby the poetic classics would be read without erecting «an artificial and unnecessary breach between the power of their poetry and the truth of their subject matter.»
Scriptural norms, principles and visions of life are often articulated in highly poetic, paradigmatic, allegorical, even cryptic language that does not lend itself to easy application.
And, as much as Bakhtin may have taught us to admire Dostoevsky's «polyphonic poetics,» most judicious readers of Russian — like the great Prince D. S. Mirsky — have recognized in Tolstoy's art the kind of serene sublimity and fullness of vision that places it naturally and worthily in the company of Shakespeare's plays, Dante's Commedia, and the Homeric epics.
Nevertheless, Haeckel, in whose vision of the universe the possibility of free will is aesthetically offensive, finds in Goethe «a perfect poetic expression» of his own philosophy.
The first is that, as an instinctive Platonist, I naturally believe that every genuine act of human creativity is simultaneously an innovation and a discovery, a marriage of poetic craft and contemplative vision that captures traces of eternity's radiance in fugitive splendors here below by translating our tacit knowledge of the eternal forms into finite objects of reflection, at once strange and strangely familiar.
Another is lodged in the forehead of the calm Zen cyborg named Vision (Paul Bettany), one of the few poetic touches in a work of pounding Marvel - ized prose.
A disarmingly poetic - and specifically female - vision of adolescence that it belongs in a category of its own.
But both directors also take poetic license in creating a universe of their own, giving us at once a compelling historiographic account, a pure work of auteurist vision, and a playful historical recreation, with touches of bizarre humour and an ineffable absurdist spirit interspersed throughout.
Though I've long admired del Toro's vision, this is the first time all the pieces have come together perfectly, bound together by the poetic notion that powerless individuals are collectively stronger than the institutions that oppress them.
A «nonfiction film» that creates the poetic aura of a narrative film, David mixes most of the audiovisual genres of expressionism, documentary, fiction, avant - garde, video art, visual arts: posters, collages, drawings, to offer the most complete and multi layered vision of a popular hero ever rendered in a film.
Combining great vision like Blake's, a Dickinsonian philosophical introspection, and a richly modern sensuality, this selection demonstrates the full range of Graham's poetic gifts.
The Muse is an online bi-annual journal of poetry from India.The vision of the journal is to make it a storehouse of best contemporary poetry and representative poetic criticism.
But many of the passages and monologues in his earlier, groundbreaking work, such as «The Electric Kool - Aid Acid Test» and «Radical Chic & Mau - Mauing the Flak Catchers,» are much more poetic in content and vision and much more powerful as poetry than as narrative.
But if MoMA's vision of abstraction embraces the work of the Abstract Expressionists, then it makes no sense whatsoever to exclude Miró and Klee, whose richly poetic understanding of the content of abstract art left such a deep impression on the American avant - garde in the 1940s.
That painting is more than just craft, it also about integrity, vision and poetics.
Emilija Škarnulytė's work consists of a series of politically active visions, in which she investigates reality with a political and poetic approach.
«Jim Hodges: sometimes beauty immerses the viewer within the poetic practice and attuned vision of one of the most compelling artists working today.
Exhibitionism seeks to amplify this independent vision through individual exhibitions that, variously, consider aspects of the social landscape, the poetics and politics of space, language and semiotics, figuration and the grotesque, interiority and exteriority, pattern and decoration, and rupture and displacement, among many other possibilities.
Arckus, Anthony Leon (introduction), Pittsburgh International (catalogue), Carnegie Institute, Pittsburgh, 1970 Billam, Michael (introduction), John Hoyland, Prints & Monotypes 1979 - 1983 (catalogue), Waddington Graphics, London 1983 Bowness, Alan (introduction), Recent British Paintings (catalogue), Whitechapel Gallery, London, 1967 Brett, Guy, «John Hoyland» in X Bienal de São Paulo Gra - Bretanha 1969 (catalogue), British Council / Lund Humphries, London, 1969 Compton, Michael, «John Hoyland» in Contemporary Artists, St James's Press, London, 1989 Gooding, Mel, «John Hoyland», John Taylor / Lund Humphries, 1990; The Poetic Trace: Aspects of British Abstraction since 1945 (catalogue), Adelson Galleries, New York, 1992; John Hoyland in the 1960s (catalogue), Neville Keating Pictures Ltd, London, 2001 Harrison, Charles, «John Hoyland» in X São Paulo Biennale 1969 (catalogue), Brazil, 1969 Hoyland, John, «Hans Hofmann — An Appreciation» in Hans Hofmann: Late Paintings (catalogue), Tate Gallery, London, 1988 Hoyland, John, The Dialectics of Vision: Hoyland's Bali Paintings (catalogue), Theo Waddington, London 1995 John Hoyland (catalogue), Waddington Galleries, London 1973 John Hoyland (catalogue), Galeria Modulo, Lisbon, 1976 John Hoyland (catalogue), Waddington Galleries, London, 1981 John Hoyland (catalogue), Waddington Galleries, London 1985 John Hoyland: Paintings (catalogue) Waddington Galleries, London, 1969 John Hoyland: Paintings (catalogue), Waddington Galleries, London, 1970 John Hoyland: Recent paintings (catalogue), Waddington Galleries, London, 1971 Lambirth, Andrew, «John Hoyland: Scatter the Devils», Unicorn Press 2009 Lucie - Smith, Edward, British Painting and Sculpture 1960 - 1970 (catalogue), National Gallery of Art, Washington DC, 1970 Lynn, Elwyn, «Hoyland — Then and Now» in John Hoyland, Paintings Australia 1980 (catalogue), University Gallery, University of Melbourne, 1980 Lynton, Norbert, «British Art Today» in Smithsonian, vol.
In the video, shot in Mali, people reveal their personal visions of the future, which are in turn hopeful and poetic, spiritual and fantastic.
In this climate of nostalgia, the nocturne has come to represent a contemporary expression of poetic and introspective visions
Hulusi's messianic artistic vision is poetic yet critically observant as it lays out a new way of understanding the philosophical implications of our post political age.
Arranged on the wall in an all - over rhythm, these carefully rendered minimal visions of found bits of the natural world become an intimate meditation on the poetics of the infinite.
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