Sentences with phrase «popular image it created»

Not exact matches

And this is why I think that creating more positive images of birth in popular culture could go a long way in changing people's perceptions of birth — and for the better!
The most popular images on Pinterest are portrait format rather than square or landscape - shaped, so consider this when pinning, as well as when creating your own product shots.
Cornell shared her own breastfeeding image among her breastfeeding support group and the idea became popular among other mothers who wanted to create artsy «brelfies,» or breastfeeding selfies.
Viewing devices that took advantage of stereopsis to create illusions of depth in images of natural scenes, architectural monuments and even pornography became immensely popular in Victorian drawing rooms.
While these are both very popular brands, I felt that choosing Louboutin footwear would reinforce the new, modern image that I am trying to create.
Working Paper Series # 1: Michael A. Genovese, Art and Politics: The Political Film as a Pedagogical Tool # 2: Donald B. Morlan, Pre-World War II Propaganda: Film as Controversy # 3: Ernest D. Giglio, From Riefenstahl to the Three Stooges: Defining the Political Film # 4: John W. Williams, The Real Oliver North Loses: The Reel Bob Robert Wins # 5: Robert L. Savage, Popular Film and Popular Communication # 6: Andrew Aoki, «Chan Is Missing:» Liberalism and the Blending of a Kaleidoscopic Culture # 7: Barbara Allen, Using Film and Television in the Classroom to Explore the Nexus of Sexual and Political Violence # 8: Robert S. Robins & Jerrold M. Post, Political Paranoia as Cinematic Motif: Stone's «JFK» # 9: Richard A. Brisbin, Jr., From State and Local Censorship to Ratings: Substantitive Rationality, Political Entrepreneurship, and Sex in the Movies # 10: Stefanie L. Martin, Fiction and Independent Films: Creating Viable Communities and Coalitions by Reappropriating History # 11: Peter J. Haas, A Typology of Political Film # 12: Phillip L. Gianos, The Cold War in U.S. Films: Representing the Political Other # 13: Michael A. Genovese, The President as Icon & Straw Man: Hollywood & the Presidential Image # 14: Michael Krukones, Hollywood's Portrayal of the American President in the 1930s: A Strong and Revered Leader # 15.
Consider computer generated images (CGI), the use of cones and spheres in creating aliens in the popular TV series, Doctor Who, or perhaps think about the computer games that wouldn't be possible without maths — you can sense the pupil engagement already!
The pack includes: Powerpoint - A Powerpoint about the festival of Hanukkah - when it is, what is eaten, how it is celebrated - the pages could also be printed off to enable you to create a class book for the children to read Photographs - Colour photos of a Menorah, a Dreidel, Hanukkah Gelt and people lighting the Menorah candles - great to add to your displays or for discussion Word cards Fact cards - Fact cards about the festival of Hanukkah Display banners - 2 different large titles for displays «Happy Hanukkah» and «Hanukkah» each with Hanukkah themed pictures Display border - A colourful display border with Hanukkah themed pictures - this can be printed as many times as you need to use on a display border of any size Writing pages - A collection of decorated A4 border pages - great for the children's work or to add to your writing area at Hanukkah Colour page border - A collection of colour A4 border pages - a great way to quickly display the children's work Colour posters - A set of A4 information posters with pictures of Gelt money, Menorah, Dreidel and Potato Latkes Display lettering - Large letters spelling «Hanukkah» which are decorated with pictures linked to Hanukkah - Great for a larger display Hanukkah story - The Hanukkah story for you to read aloud to the children Colouring posters - A collection of posters for the children to colour - these could also be printed smaller for the children to use on their Hanukkah cards Bookmarks - A collection of Hanukkah themed bookmarks for the children to cut out and colour Number line - A number line to 50 on colourful Dreidels Alphabet line - An alphabet line on candles - this could also be used for other festivals or a part of a birthday display Colour posters - A4 posters with pictures of images associated with Hanukkah Songs and rhymes - A collection of decorated song sheets with songs and rhymes about Hanukkah including two number rhymes Recipe - A photo recipe to make Latke cakes - a popular Hanukkah dish - the pages can be printed to make a book or used for displays Dreidel game - A Dreidel spinner to cut out and play the game of Dreidel Make a Dreidel - A 3D Dreidel spinner to make complete with instructions Hanukkah cards Acrostic poem Maths worksheet - Count the number of Dreidels Addition worksheet - Add the numbers on the Dreidels Menorah Counting - Worksheets to count the number of Menorah candles lit Cut and make a Menorah Number dominoes Word search Worksheets - Match the Hanukkah words to the pictures, draw the Hanukkah pictures and fill in the missing words Writing activities - Worksheets to write the Dreidel instructions and writing about Hanukkah
In the booklet, students will: - Respond to a stimulus image - Come up with a range of concepts in relation to the image - Storyboard their main idea - Create character profiles for major characters - Write a portion of a script for the performance - Evaluating rehearsals - Evaluating performances - Engaging in a range of design work activities (such as set and costume designs) Has proved popular with studnets (fun) and staff (low maintenance) Feedback welcomed and appreciated!
The most popular type of e-paper in use today is E Ink's electrophoretic technology, which creates images by moving around charged white and black particles floating in a clear fluid.
Google + — Updates to the popular social networking app include a new navigation menu that makes it much easier to work within the app, the ability to create animated GIFs and photobooth style images on the fly as well as adding a new and easier way to add posts.
One of the reasons that make e-book readers so popular is its ability to improve the readability and clarity of screen, which creates a virtual printed page image.
Advice from Pinterest experts said that for popular posts, you should create an improved image and repin that.
The selfie camera on each has a dual lens to create the popular blurred background (bokeh) effect using a Samsung feature called Live Focus, but neither camera has optical image stabilization.
Animoto is popular with authors as they can create a book promo using a mixture of video images, photographs, text and audio files.
Tip: Some of these CBx readers, like GonVisor, can also create a CBR or CBZ file from a collection of images, super handy if you want to create your own comic book using one of these popular formats.
Some argue that conformation shows create an unhealthy image or standard by which most dogs can't compete, that breeding for conformation has all but ruined several of the popular breeds we know and love, and that it supports inhumane procedures like cropping ears and docking tails.
This week we have more charitable streamers, the return of a popular ace pilot, a roundup of all the livestreams from last weekend's LaveCon and a couple of preview images for an Elite Dangerous fan - created card game.
There's also the popular NexGen Gallery which will create a gallery for your images.
The exhibition also includes works from the series Photoshop Gradient Demonstrations, consisting of unique prints showing fades between colors that have been created by using the popular image processing software Photoshop's standard gradient tool.
Co-curators Julia Dolan, The Minor White Curator of Photography, and Sara Krajewski, The Robert and Mercedes Eichholz Curator of Modern and Contemporary Art will focus on how Thomas reframes popular, commercial and media images and creates participatory opportunities to foster knowledge and embrace new viewpoints.
In regard to American popular culture, Bogin believes that in such a mediatized world, in which every sign is charged with meaning, it becomes increasingly problematical to create a «meaning - free» images that Minimal Art historically demands.
Moving from scenes of terror and violence to images of great intimacy, and drawing on film, photography, political cartoons and other sources in popular culture, Lawrence created an innovative format of sequential panels, each image accompanied by a descriptive caption.
Splicing together images taken from popular magazines, illustrated journals and fashion publications, she created a humorous and moving commentary on society during a time of tremendous social change.
At the time, he was creating prevalently images of popular superheroes and gradually started to include female nudes emerging from bizarre objects, such as cornstalks, bananas, candy wrappers, martini glasses or famous cigar and cigarette brands such as Havana.
Deborah Roberts creates visually arresting collages that encourage important conversations about girlhood, vulnerability, body image, popular culture, self - image, and the dysfunctional legacy of colorism.
In one of the rooms, Block Experiments in Cosmococa, Program in Progress: CC1 Trashiscapes, visitors are offered mattresses, pillows and nailfiles, in order to properly enjoy the environment created by a slide show of images related to the project and the sound of the popular music from the period.
Through the intersection of art historical, mass media and popular culture clichés, Richter creates idiosyncratic worlds and images of unstable realities.
Wesselmann and his contemporaries — Andy Warhol, Roy Lichtenstein and James Rosenquist — forged the Pop Art movement by creating large scale, dynamic compositions, experimenting with new media, and using images from everyday popular culture.
His work deals with images, language and themes gathered from popular culture, and he is known for productions in which he deconstructs language and images, and creates sculptures reflecting both aggression and retreat.
Through its collage of images, creating, according to Rosenquist, «a kind of motion in the mind», America's mainstream cultural values were being questioned by its own popular advertising imagery.
With massive drawings, Jamal blends references from popular culture, religious iconography, and symbolism in an attempt to create a possible image of what our multilayered identities could look like.
Her scenes are created by incorporating paintings and photographs of herself, her husband and her family with found images from popular Nigerian fashion and lifestyle magazines.
In Sounds Like Her, Boyce is presenting a new development of her ongoing Devotional series with the names of 200 black British female performers inscribed on a wallpaper, overlaid with placards especially created for the exhibition, featuring images of these women, plucked from Boyce's own archive of concert announcements, fashion magazines and other materials documenting popular culture.
Some create paper models with images gleaned from current events, popular magazines, or the internet for the express purpose of photographing them.
Kota Ezawa draws from the histories of media, popular culture, and art history to create distilled renderings of iconic images.
Alison Ward's performances, videos and sculptures create a world populated by a masked and costumed cast that re-interpret her own image in the form of popular cultural icons.
Prince's technique involves appropriation, and he pilfers freely from the vast image bank of popular culture to create works that simultaneously embrace and critique a quintessentially American sensibility, with images stemming from the Marlboro Man, muscle cars, biker chicks, off - color jokes, gag cartoons and pulp fiction novels, among many other sources.
Solo exhibition featuring scrolling patchwork extending over seventy feet, as well as enlarged prints, all created with appropriated images from news outlets and popular mass media.
For her solo exhibition, in medias res (t), on view at the Downtown café March 29th through May 16th, Stevens presents a scrolling patchwork extending over seventy feet, as well as enlarged prints, all created with appropriated images from news outlets and popular mass media.
James Casebere first came to notice as a member of the famed «Pictures Generation,» standing out from fellow artists like Cindy Sherman and Richard Prince for his uncanny take on appropriation: instead of lifting images from popular culture, Casebere created tabletop models of architectural settings out of modest materials and photographed them in eerily flat, theatrical light.
He utilises the full potential of digital technology, using his own store of images to create a compelling narrative that is based on clips and sound montages from film scores and popular music.
Creating images made of dust, chocolate sauce, sugar, or thread, his work is informed by media and popular culture.
By appropriating images from the mass media — including iconic film posters, album covers, magazine pages, photographic test plates, and simple notebooks — and re-photographing them, Collier creates her own personal lexicon of popular culture.
He is the author of the catalogues that accompanied these exhibitions, and also contributed the photography component and an anthology essay to the exhibition «Made in California: Art, Image, and Identity, 1900 - 2000» (2000) which traced the interaction of fine art and popular culture in creating the identity of California.
Chris Ofili's intricately constructed works, combining beadlike dots of paint, collaged images from popular media, and elephant dung, create a unique iconography that marries African artistic and ritual practices with Western art historical traditions and contemporary hip - hop culture.
Today the artist's book — a medium combining image and text in a book - like package but meant to be engaged with as art rather than read — is a widely known and wildly popular format, with both established artists like Lawrence Weiner and Richard Tuttle to rising stars like Bjarne Melgaard and Darren Bader creating significant examples.
Mickalene Thomas (b. 1971) creates images of African American women as a way to scrutinize and disrupt popular notions of female beauty.
Pushing back against the anachronistic images that haunt Africa in popular culture and parlance, they managed to create a space that facilitated dozens of individual, specific, complex histories, even within the larger cadre of a glitzy art fair.
Wrestling memorabilia will shine a light on Blake's childhood trips to wrestling matches, and images of popular art and culture will reveal the crossover of themes within Blake's collection and the artworks he creates.
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