Garnered visibility is also tied to communications and public relations programs as they continually seek to gain the attention of reporters, bloggers, analysts, influencers and catalysts who can drive awareness and behavior based on the words, stories, and
social objects they create and distribute.
Not exact matches
But as a child gets older, persistent oral mouthing / biting of toys and
objects can
create problems related to hygiene, safety, and appropriate
social interactions.
What are the
social, political, economic, and even personal circumstances that drove the artist to
create this
object and find an audience for it?
There were a range of
social effects as well: children were seen to be negotiating items with other children, which is quite a higher order thinking skill; they were modelling behaviour on others, so they could actually see how children were playing with some of the equipment and then being able to join in (so it was a lot more inclusive, they were able to see how some of the children used some of the equipment); and they were really working together, using teamwork skills and
creating these different
objects and structures and stations to play around in the school playground.
This includes
creating free and paid resources for self - publishing, websites and
social media - as well as making beautiful
objects.
It
creates empathy, focus, and serves as a
social object in a way that's impossible with the elastic concept of user.
Because Starbucks
created a
social object out of a paper cup, the homeless guy does their marketing for free, whether he knows it or not.
I'd suggest there's also a variable here about positive v negative that you should think about before quitting that job [Bonus Link] US News & World Report: «Selling in a Post-Meatball Era - The quest for «
social objects» that
create their own Web buzz.»
Old, traditional advertising was all about
creating messages for the media, not about
creating social objects for the people using the media.
-LSB-...] traditional advertising was all about
creating messages for the media, not about
creating social objects for the people using the -LSB-...]
-LSB-...] It
creates social objects.
A more powerful marketing strategy it seems to me, is to
create an
object worthy enough to be introduced into already agreed upon
social construct.
I
create the cartoons as «
Social Objects», i.e. «Sharing Devices» that help me to build relationships with.
The work that you
create will affect the cube grenades and
social objects, that your clients and their customers use to interact with each other.
so that future
social objects can can be
created in its wake.
It is now our responsibility to
create and connect meaningful content directly within the places where our audiences communicate with each other and also interact with the
social objects that compel them to share and react.
Social objects represent the content we create in social media, including images, videos, blog posts, comments, status updates, wall posts, and all other social activity that sparks the potential for online conversa
Social objects represent the content we
create in
social media, including images, videos, blog posts, comments, status updates, wall posts, and all other social activity that sparks the potential for online conversa
social media, including images, videos, blog posts, comments, status updates, wall posts, and all other
social activity that sparks the potential for online conversa
social activity that sparks the potential for online conversations.
Instead of first focusing on traffic, think about how you can
create value and get my attention through
social objects.
Emerging in the early 1970s, Austrian artist Franz West (1947 - 2012)
created objects that serve to redefine art as a
social experience, calling attention to how viewers interact with works of art and with each other.
But once we introduce a
social object, we must stand ready to handhold existing subjects throughout the
social web as well as
create a publishing calendar rich with relevant content, programmed specifically for each network in which we maintain a presence.
Ward re-contextualizes these found
objects in thought - provoking juxtapositions that
create complex, metaphorical meanings to confront
social and political issues surrounding race, poverty, and consumer culture.
The boundary of a contemporary art
object or project is no longer thought of solely in physical terms but rather in relation to the specific
social field it
creates.
The
objects and works
created will explore the experience of becoming an aficionado, actualizing desire, and the
social exploration of motorcycle riding as a cognitive dream space akin to the «zone» or «flow» of artistic creation.
Opening: «Diana Fonseca Quiñones» at Sean Kelly The first solo show of the Havana - based artist Diana Fonseca Quiñones outside of Cuba, this exhibition features recent paintings, sculptures and video works employing everyday
objects and experiences to
create poetic narratives that comment on
social concerns.
Sometimes dubbed India's Damien Hirst, Subodh Gupta is one of India's leading contemporary artists, who
creates mainly large - scale sculptures and installations (from stainless steel Indian kitchenware and other found
objects) that address the country's changing
social landscape.
Donald Judd and Jorge Pardo's works adapt languages and (production) methodologies derived from architecture and design to
create essentially «hybrid»
objects, which, like those of Palermo, seek to conflate, and possibly confuse, the
social and aesthetic possibilities of art.
In her past project Light Atlas (2014), a result of a yearlong road trip throughout the United States, the artist explored the
social and geographic characteristics of paintings as what she calls «place settings,» or stakeholders — as
objects that
create meaning from particular representations of claims to space.
With its extraordinary collection the MAK serves a dual purpose as a conservator of significant
objects and as a laboratory for research and artistic production aiming at
creating social awareness for various issues of our time.
Jesse Butcher mines texts and
objects to
create new visual forms and provide
social commentary on hegemony.
Using mass - produced materials, such as aluminum, chipboard, and Plexiglas, Gillick
creates modular
objects that he arranges in site - specific installations to explore how evidence of our
social, political, and economic systems are embedded in the built environment.
With these works, Posenenske subverted the status and the commodity value of the unique, exclusive and costly
object of art, to
create a more
social, accessible, and public work of art.
In both pieces, Ward endeavors to bring the experience of living in a community surveilled by the police into the gallery, using everyday
objects that
create a tangible link to the reality of our current political and
social climate.
Pipilotti Rist is widely known for her large - size video - installations, though which she ironically (and self - ironically) investigates taboos, conventions, and
social issues by inviting the visitors to interact with the works, as well as by
creating «worlds» where spaces and every - day
objects combine with a surprising use of light, videos, and projected images.
Through the distortion of natural forms and movements in nature and in
objects, she seek to
create small, visual breaches in the
social settings and norms that we as humans relate to.
Purifoy dedicated himself to the found
object and to using art as a tool for
social change in the 20 years that followed the rebellion, after which he relocated to California's Mojave Desert, where he spent his final 15 years
creating large - scale installations.
The Deluge Group is
creating a mobile sculpture trailer, which serves as a place of production and vehicle for the exhibition and sale of a wide range of art
objects, trash constructions and
objects of
social parody, and other creative forms of exchange.
-LSB-...] is artist Hugh McLeod talking about why the «
social object» is the future of marketing: http://old.gapingvoid.com/2008/01/02…Basically, by applying something that causes us to talk to an otherwise inanimate
object, you
create -LSB-...]
I remember thinking that
creating social objects (or indeed
object ideas) would be a struggle if you had an uncool mass market brand, but I reckon this interview shows how Costco managed it with a hotdog (about 2/3 of the way down the page):
-LSB-...] Rangaswami, musing about
social objects and why
social objects are
created by our stories, lives and shared experiences, not the -LSB-...]
topline: messaging used to be advertising's backbone, but that's damn boring, in contrast some
objects can
create social interaction and that rocks -LSB-...]
You could argue that you are
creating a
social object with yourself I guess.
it's good to have both read and heard and watched Hugh do his thing —
create social objects.
He transforms mundane
objects into powerful
social commentary with the intent of
creating dialogue among his audience.
[4] Inspired by the concept / model of Joseph Beuys
social sculpture, that have the potential to transform society, ART / MEDIA was an extended artwork that included human interactions,
creating structures and systems within society using language, thought,
objects, events and actions.
Immersive installations, paintings, sculptural
objects, photographs and videos by forty artists reveal how the universal language of this transnational game can define beauty, make
social statements,
create a sense of community and express a shared passion.
Unlike VanDerBeek's
social videos, Haacke
created kinetic art systems,
objects that set in motion an action that had no end point.
Plants, inanimate
objects, images, affect and energies are all seen as part of the same organic whole, where an isomorphism is
created between
social forces and material ecologies.
Through the use of imagery,
objects and practices taken from books on psychology, pedagogy, medicine, the
social sciences and theater techniques such as the psychodrama, the artist has often worked with children and kids from both elementary and junior high schools,
creating workshops of which the outcome is fully incorporated in her work.
Yet, we're asked repeatedly to
create viral videos, posts, and other
social objects that will trigger an endless array of retweets, pages and profiles that immediately attract fans and followers accompanied by a deafening wall of sound propelled by word of mouth.
A key to having a
social object is your ability to
create conversation.