Sentences with phrase «points of departure for»

These images were originally based on photos Anderson took while watching his father get a haircut, but photographs function for Anderson much as they do for the two artists who most evidently influence him, Luc Tuymans and Peter Doig (Doig is a former teacher of Anderson's): not as objective documents but as points of departure for painterly reveries about the nature of history, whether personal or shared.»
Architect Edward Larrabee Barnes's original designs for the Walker's 1971 building and curator Lucy Lippard's 1973 group show c. 7,500, featuring work by an all - women roster of conceptual artists, were also important points of departure for Deschenes's intervention here.
The points of departure for Saron Lockhart's solo exhibition «Movements and Variations» stem from her ongoing interest in portraiture, representation, movement, labour and the power of women.
As points of departure for these individual experimental arrangements, Germann uses characters from history such as Napoleon or motifs from myth and fantasy such as lycanthropy (from the Greek lukos, «wolf,» and anthropos, «man»: the werewolf motif), which he subjects to a revisionary rewriting, interweaving factual and fictional aspects.
These provide points of departure for an exploration into hidden stories and new perspectives on the collection and its history.
Baziotes adopted the Surrealists» investment in fantasy and the principle of automatism as points of departure for his compositions.
Works in the exhibition (including pieces by Christi Belcourt, Maria Hupfield, Cheryl L'Hirondelle, Isaac Murdoch, and Esther Neff) will serve as points of departure for Wednesday's conversation between three Indigenous women — Columbia University professor Audra Simpson, Columbia PhD candidate Crystal Migwans, and Tarah Hogue, a senior curatorial fellow in Indigenous art at the Vancouver Art Gallery.
Korean - born, New York - based Jinkee Choi takes ordinary objects - toothpaste tubes, packaging, trash - as points of departure for an exploration of what he calls «the Unconsciousness World.»
The project takes William Morris» eponymous 1884 text on the re-imagining of the factory, and Colin Ward's response in The Factory We Never Had (1994), as points of departure for reflexively examining contemporary sites of production, education and social space, and the intersections between industry and leisure, performance and congregation.
Interviews, documents, or historical events are points of departure for experimental narratives and documentaries that play with fraught truth, as she investigates the space between presence and absence, memory and erasure in personal knowledge of historical narrative.
«The diverse group of works that are NOMA 100 create new points of departure for examining future collecting efforts,» said Taylor.
Artist Statement Intense preoccupations with self - concept, desire, and tribalism are the points of departure for my recent installation and performance work.
The lines and marks on the painting's surface are not mere points of departure for the journey towards meaning, but also the meaning itself.
Numerous works from the collection of the Nationalgalerie provide points of departure for multiple narratives.
He mines literature and Art History for scenes that provide points of departure for his fantastical abstractions.
The trees, milkweed, haystacks, and brackish river were rife with activity, and served as points of departure for new works.
The observed pattern of the reduced genera and families of bacteria seems very characteristic of heart failure, which is why these results may be new points of departure for therapies.
Their work will serve both as background and points of departure for my own discussion.
Some of the basic points of departure for a Christian consideration of issues of justice and peace.
These texts and studies do not exhaust the various ways in which women were perceived, and their roles commented upon, by writers of the early church, but they offer points of departure for a discussion on the contribution of women to the life and witness of the early church without forgetting that the «ancient sources and modern historians agree that primary conversion to Christianity was far more prevalent among females than among males» [13] in the time of the early church.
This vision serves as «a viable point of departure for oppressed persons, suggesting that in the quest for liberation oppressed persons must claim their freedom.»
But these conditions invite some questions: Is the field of physical science an appropriate point of departure for philosophy?
Might one just as readily experience a «consciousness of [89] absolute belovedness» as an initial point of departure for probing God's relation with us?
The prophet will not allow us to use faith as a point of departure for taking our journey through life or constructing our morality, ecclesiology, or politics.
We see at once that the historical in the more concrete sense is a matter of indifference; we may suppose a degree of ignorance with respect to it, and permit this ignorance as if to annihilate one detail after the other, historically annihilating the historical; if only the Moment remains, as point of departure for the Eternal, the Paradox will be there.
And so the new point of departure for reason had to be the perceiving subject rather than the world perceived.
Pannenberg's other christological innovation is his reintroduction of the concept of logos, which in Jesus: God and Man he replaced with the idea of revelation as the point of departure for Christology.
What happens in Zen enlightenment, however, is that this perpetual process of living and dying — the everyday mind — becomes the lived point of departure for all activity in the world.
At the same time this local and topical realization must be nothing but a point of departure for the larger goal of organic cells unified in a restructured society.
Thus the eyes being opened in no way constitutes a point of departure for the luminous ascent of humanity.
We sense in all of this the dawn of a new dispensation, a fresh, if sometimes uneven, point of departure for the apostolic heritage, a galvanizing hope, born of proven confidence that we can move beyond Day One of the missionary landing to enter new fields and spheres with our hearts and minds fixed on the right things.
The point of departure for liberation theology is where the oppressed find themselves.
We can certainly say that this will be the point of departure for history, since it is composed of all humanity's efforts to subsist and persist.
His thoughts on the special role of agape in evolution may serve as a point of departure for developing a conceptual scheme that makes room for the origin of what is radically new in a world of regularity and order.
A sort of nonbiblical text and point of departure for this lecture is to be found in one of the definitions in Webster's Dictionary, which characterizes power as an ability either to produce or to undergo an effect.
In other words, for some, it is a question of neo-Keynesianism and for others it is the point of departure for a non-capitalist alternative to neo-liberalism.
Nearly everyone, I have found, is interested in the dramatic story of AA, and this is a natural point of departure for a discussion of alcoholism.
The cosmos can now be envisioned not only as a point of departure for the spiritual journey but as fellow traveler into mystery.
Thus fidelity to our religious traditions demands that we embrace the traditional ideal of religious homelessness as the point of departure for self - transcendence.
The synthesis of one age then becomes the thesis of the next; the newly formulated content of tradition becomes the point of departure for the next stage.»
One may wonder whether this takes into account the religious attitude in its essence — for the present I put aside the Christian event, which poses still other problems — for the religious attitude appears fundamentally as the expression of a dependence, whatever the point of departure for this dependence may be.
... which claims to recover in its purity the first layer of facts and ideas which served as a point of departure for the first generation of Christians.
Rather, they argue, Constantinople took a different, though similar, local baptismal creed as its point of departure for reaffirming the «faith of Nicea.»
The symptomatic triad of bleeding between the brain and skull (known as subdural or subarachnoid hematomas), bleeding behind the retinas, and brain swelling is both the core of an SBS diagnosis and the point of departure for the syndrome's skeptics.
A complicated family dynamic is the point of departure for The Disappeared, part horror movie, part psychological study.
The foreword, written by editor in chief Daniel Dawkins, briefly brings up this question as a point of departure for the book A Hideo Kojima Book: The Ultimate Guide to Metal Gear Solid.
As a point of departure for my first editorial for Research in Learning Technology, this seemed appropriate; a reflection on how — along with my fellow editors, our contributing authors and pool of reviewers — we have worked together to surface these six stories of research in this field.
Stephen L. Gessner uses the Education Week classifieds as a point of departure for an analysis of what is wrong in American schooling («What the Want Ads Can Tell Us About the Educational Wars,» July 8, 1998).
If you're a classroom teacher and are interested in trying out this idea, here are a few questions that might serve as a good point of departure for teaching discipline:
Alternatively, a negative signal can provide a point of departure for instructional change or outside intervention.
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