Not exact matches
That's the kind of thing that shows someone has a calling: when they can see their part
in the
history of
something; when they can see that their
work is part of
something bigger than themselves.
There is therefore
something too self - conscious, too mannered, too artificial
in a
work undertaken with one eye on its likely place
in history.
Flat, blank facades on buildings conceived as commodities — or just oddities — rather than
works of civic art; flat modernist pictorial abstractions; the flattening of cultural
history into pseudo-
history packaged as what Henry dismissed as «applied sociology» — all spoke to him of
something far more ominous, the abasement of man and the crude negation of his proper relationship to nature as embodied
in the great tradition.
Polkinghorne explained that «Science tells us how the world
works, but religion tells us there is a meaning and purpose,
something being fulfilled
in the unfolding of the
history of the world.
But to seek out the sinner, and, instead of avoiding the bad companion, to choose him as your friend
in order to
work his moral redemption, this was, I fancy,
something new
in the religious
history of Israel....
In a few thousand years of recorded history, we went from dwelling in caves and mud huts and tee - pees, not understanding the natural world around us, or the broader universe, to being able to travel through space, using reason to ferret out the hidden secrets of how the world works, from physics to chemistry to biology, we worked out the tools and rules underpinning it all, mathematics, and now we can see objects that are almost impossibly small, the very tiniest building blocks of matter, (or at least we can examine them, even if you can't «see» them because you're using something other than your eyes and photons to view them) to the very farthest objects, the planets circling other, distant stars, that are in their own way, too small to see from here, like the atoms and parts of atoms themselves, detected indirectly, but indisputably THER
In a few thousand years of recorded
history, we went from dwelling
in caves and mud huts and tee - pees, not understanding the natural world around us, or the broader universe, to being able to travel through space, using reason to ferret out the hidden secrets of how the world works, from physics to chemistry to biology, we worked out the tools and rules underpinning it all, mathematics, and now we can see objects that are almost impossibly small, the very tiniest building blocks of matter, (or at least we can examine them, even if you can't «see» them because you're using something other than your eyes and photons to view them) to the very farthest objects, the planets circling other, distant stars, that are in their own way, too small to see from here, like the atoms and parts of atoms themselves, detected indirectly, but indisputably THER
in caves and mud huts and tee - pees, not understanding the natural world around us, or the broader universe, to being able to travel through space, using reason to ferret out the hidden secrets of how the world
works, from physics to chemistry to biology, we
worked out the tools and rules underpinning it all, mathematics, and now we can see objects that are almost impossibly small, the very tiniest building blocks of matter, (or at least we can examine them, even if you can't «see» them because you're using
something other than your eyes and photons to view them) to the very farthest objects, the planets circling other, distant stars, that are
in their own way, too small to see from here, like the atoms and parts of atoms themselves, detected indirectly, but indisputably THER
in their own way, too small to see from here, like the atoms and parts of atoms themselves, detected indirectly, but indisputably THERE.
a few of my grandchildren deciced they wanted to spend the weekend and while doing so decided to look for
something they themselve could make for themand grandma for lunch while i was out doing things
in the garden, so to make a long story short when asked if they could make lunch i said sure but no cooking on the stove.thinking that would save them geyying hurt
in any way.i half exoecte beanut butter and jelly or ham and chesse sandwiches and chips or
something but what got was This wonderful Taco Pizza., I always keep taco meat made up i the freezer along with all the other things
in which to make easy fast dishes for them needless to say i was delighted and surprized., when i askes how they did it I was told thats for us to know and you to enjoy.well I did and i think that if a 14,10 and very very smart 3 yr old can make this its simply wonderful.thank you and it took some
work but i bribed the 10 yr old into telling my where he found it thank goodness the computer has
history, lol, and bookmarking.its
something every mother or grandmother should try to make with their little taco lovers.thank you From a grandmother
In the midfield, (including RWB & LWB) we have a whole bunch of tweeners... none offer the full package, none make sense in our manager's current favourite formation, except for Sead on the left and Ox on the right, and all of them have never shown any consistency for more than a heartbeat... Sead, who I'm including in this category because of our present formation, looks like a positive addition, minus his occasional brain farts, but I would rather see what he could do in a back 4 before making my mind up... Ox, who has never played better, which isn't saying much considering his largely underwhelming play in previous seasons, seems to have found a home in this new formation; unfortunately, can we really expect this oft - injured player to handle the taxing duties that come with said position over the long haul, not to mention, it looks like he has no intention of staying... Ramsey has relied on the empathy that stems from his gruesome injury years ago and the excitement that was generated a few years back when he finally seemed to put in altogether, but on the whole he has been a big disappointment (neither he nor the Ox have scored enough to warrant a regular spot)... Wiltshire should be put on a weekly contract then played until he suffers his first injury, if and when that occurs he should be shipped - out and no one should very be allowed to say his name on club grounds ever again... Elnehy & Coq are average players who couldn't make any of the top 7 teams currently in the EPL... both have showed some great energy on the pitch, but neither are top quality and no good team can afford to have that many average players on their bench playing the same position, especially with Coq's injury history / discipline concerns and Elheny's headless chicken tendencies... as for Xhaka, his tenure here so far has been incredibly underwhelming... we know he has some skills to provide the long ball but his defensive work is piss poor and he gives the ball away too cheaply and far too often... finally, the enigma himself, Ozil, so much skill with his left foot but his presence has been more frustrating than uplifting... in many respects his failure has been directly related to the failure of this club to provide him with the necessary players up front, minus Sanchez of course, and unless something drastic happens very soon his legacy will be largely a negative one (much like Wenger'
In the midfield, (including RWB & LWB) we have a whole bunch of tweeners... none offer the full package, none make sense
in our manager's current favourite formation, except for Sead on the left and Ox on the right, and all of them have never shown any consistency for more than a heartbeat... Sead, who I'm including in this category because of our present formation, looks like a positive addition, minus his occasional brain farts, but I would rather see what he could do in a back 4 before making my mind up... Ox, who has never played better, which isn't saying much considering his largely underwhelming play in previous seasons, seems to have found a home in this new formation; unfortunately, can we really expect this oft - injured player to handle the taxing duties that come with said position over the long haul, not to mention, it looks like he has no intention of staying... Ramsey has relied on the empathy that stems from his gruesome injury years ago and the excitement that was generated a few years back when he finally seemed to put in altogether, but on the whole he has been a big disappointment (neither he nor the Ox have scored enough to warrant a regular spot)... Wiltshire should be put on a weekly contract then played until he suffers his first injury, if and when that occurs he should be shipped - out and no one should very be allowed to say his name on club grounds ever again... Elnehy & Coq are average players who couldn't make any of the top 7 teams currently in the EPL... both have showed some great energy on the pitch, but neither are top quality and no good team can afford to have that many average players on their bench playing the same position, especially with Coq's injury history / discipline concerns and Elheny's headless chicken tendencies... as for Xhaka, his tenure here so far has been incredibly underwhelming... we know he has some skills to provide the long ball but his defensive work is piss poor and he gives the ball away too cheaply and far too often... finally, the enigma himself, Ozil, so much skill with his left foot but his presence has been more frustrating than uplifting... in many respects his failure has been directly related to the failure of this club to provide him with the necessary players up front, minus Sanchez of course, and unless something drastic happens very soon his legacy will be largely a negative one (much like Wenger'
in our manager's current favourite formation, except for Sead on the left and Ox on the right, and all of them have never shown any consistency for more than a heartbeat... Sead, who I'm including
in this category because of our present formation, looks like a positive addition, minus his occasional brain farts, but I would rather see what he could do in a back 4 before making my mind up... Ox, who has never played better, which isn't saying much considering his largely underwhelming play in previous seasons, seems to have found a home in this new formation; unfortunately, can we really expect this oft - injured player to handle the taxing duties that come with said position over the long haul, not to mention, it looks like he has no intention of staying... Ramsey has relied on the empathy that stems from his gruesome injury years ago and the excitement that was generated a few years back when he finally seemed to put in altogether, but on the whole he has been a big disappointment (neither he nor the Ox have scored enough to warrant a regular spot)... Wiltshire should be put on a weekly contract then played until he suffers his first injury, if and when that occurs he should be shipped - out and no one should very be allowed to say his name on club grounds ever again... Elnehy & Coq are average players who couldn't make any of the top 7 teams currently in the EPL... both have showed some great energy on the pitch, but neither are top quality and no good team can afford to have that many average players on their bench playing the same position, especially with Coq's injury history / discipline concerns and Elheny's headless chicken tendencies... as for Xhaka, his tenure here so far has been incredibly underwhelming... we know he has some skills to provide the long ball but his defensive work is piss poor and he gives the ball away too cheaply and far too often... finally, the enigma himself, Ozil, so much skill with his left foot but his presence has been more frustrating than uplifting... in many respects his failure has been directly related to the failure of this club to provide him with the necessary players up front, minus Sanchez of course, and unless something drastic happens very soon his legacy will be largely a negative one (much like Wenger'
in this category because of our present formation, looks like a positive addition, minus his occasional brain farts, but I would rather see what he could do
in a back 4 before making my mind up... Ox, who has never played better, which isn't saying much considering his largely underwhelming play in previous seasons, seems to have found a home in this new formation; unfortunately, can we really expect this oft - injured player to handle the taxing duties that come with said position over the long haul, not to mention, it looks like he has no intention of staying... Ramsey has relied on the empathy that stems from his gruesome injury years ago and the excitement that was generated a few years back when he finally seemed to put in altogether, but on the whole he has been a big disappointment (neither he nor the Ox have scored enough to warrant a regular spot)... Wiltshire should be put on a weekly contract then played until he suffers his first injury, if and when that occurs he should be shipped - out and no one should very be allowed to say his name on club grounds ever again... Elnehy & Coq are average players who couldn't make any of the top 7 teams currently in the EPL... both have showed some great energy on the pitch, but neither are top quality and no good team can afford to have that many average players on their bench playing the same position, especially with Coq's injury history / discipline concerns and Elheny's headless chicken tendencies... as for Xhaka, his tenure here so far has been incredibly underwhelming... we know he has some skills to provide the long ball but his defensive work is piss poor and he gives the ball away too cheaply and far too often... finally, the enigma himself, Ozil, so much skill with his left foot but his presence has been more frustrating than uplifting... in many respects his failure has been directly related to the failure of this club to provide him with the necessary players up front, minus Sanchez of course, and unless something drastic happens very soon his legacy will be largely a negative one (much like Wenger'
in a back 4 before making my mind up... Ox, who has never played better, which isn't saying much considering his largely underwhelming play
in previous seasons, seems to have found a home in this new formation; unfortunately, can we really expect this oft - injured player to handle the taxing duties that come with said position over the long haul, not to mention, it looks like he has no intention of staying... Ramsey has relied on the empathy that stems from his gruesome injury years ago and the excitement that was generated a few years back when he finally seemed to put in altogether, but on the whole he has been a big disappointment (neither he nor the Ox have scored enough to warrant a regular spot)... Wiltshire should be put on a weekly contract then played until he suffers his first injury, if and when that occurs he should be shipped - out and no one should very be allowed to say his name on club grounds ever again... Elnehy & Coq are average players who couldn't make any of the top 7 teams currently in the EPL... both have showed some great energy on the pitch, but neither are top quality and no good team can afford to have that many average players on their bench playing the same position, especially with Coq's injury history / discipline concerns and Elheny's headless chicken tendencies... as for Xhaka, his tenure here so far has been incredibly underwhelming... we know he has some skills to provide the long ball but his defensive work is piss poor and he gives the ball away too cheaply and far too often... finally, the enigma himself, Ozil, so much skill with his left foot but his presence has been more frustrating than uplifting... in many respects his failure has been directly related to the failure of this club to provide him with the necessary players up front, minus Sanchez of course, and unless something drastic happens very soon his legacy will be largely a negative one (much like Wenger'
in previous seasons, seems to have found a home
in this new formation; unfortunately, can we really expect this oft - injured player to handle the taxing duties that come with said position over the long haul, not to mention, it looks like he has no intention of staying... Ramsey has relied on the empathy that stems from his gruesome injury years ago and the excitement that was generated a few years back when he finally seemed to put in altogether, but on the whole he has been a big disappointment (neither he nor the Ox have scored enough to warrant a regular spot)... Wiltshire should be put on a weekly contract then played until he suffers his first injury, if and when that occurs he should be shipped - out and no one should very be allowed to say his name on club grounds ever again... Elnehy & Coq are average players who couldn't make any of the top 7 teams currently in the EPL... both have showed some great energy on the pitch, but neither are top quality and no good team can afford to have that many average players on their bench playing the same position, especially with Coq's injury history / discipline concerns and Elheny's headless chicken tendencies... as for Xhaka, his tenure here so far has been incredibly underwhelming... we know he has some skills to provide the long ball but his defensive work is piss poor and he gives the ball away too cheaply and far too often... finally, the enigma himself, Ozil, so much skill with his left foot but his presence has been more frustrating than uplifting... in many respects his failure has been directly related to the failure of this club to provide him with the necessary players up front, minus Sanchez of course, and unless something drastic happens very soon his legacy will be largely a negative one (much like Wenger'
in this new formation; unfortunately, can we really expect this oft - injured player to handle the taxing duties that come with said position over the long haul, not to mention, it looks like he has no intention of staying... Ramsey has relied on the empathy that stems from his gruesome injury years ago and the excitement that was generated a few years back when he finally seemed to put
in altogether, but on the whole he has been a big disappointment (neither he nor the Ox have scored enough to warrant a regular spot)... Wiltshire should be put on a weekly contract then played until he suffers his first injury, if and when that occurs he should be shipped - out and no one should very be allowed to say his name on club grounds ever again... Elnehy & Coq are average players who couldn't make any of the top 7 teams currently in the EPL... both have showed some great energy on the pitch, but neither are top quality and no good team can afford to have that many average players on their bench playing the same position, especially with Coq's injury history / discipline concerns and Elheny's headless chicken tendencies... as for Xhaka, his tenure here so far has been incredibly underwhelming... we know he has some skills to provide the long ball but his defensive work is piss poor and he gives the ball away too cheaply and far too often... finally, the enigma himself, Ozil, so much skill with his left foot but his presence has been more frustrating than uplifting... in many respects his failure has been directly related to the failure of this club to provide him with the necessary players up front, minus Sanchez of course, and unless something drastic happens very soon his legacy will be largely a negative one (much like Wenger'
in altogether, but on the whole he has been a big disappointment (neither he nor the Ox have scored enough to warrant a regular spot)... Wiltshire should be put on a weekly contract then played until he suffers his first injury, if and when that occurs he should be shipped - out and no one should very be allowed to say his name on club grounds ever again... Elnehy & Coq are average players who couldn't make any of the top 7 teams currently
in the EPL... both have showed some great energy on the pitch, but neither are top quality and no good team can afford to have that many average players on their bench playing the same position, especially with Coq's injury history / discipline concerns and Elheny's headless chicken tendencies... as for Xhaka, his tenure here so far has been incredibly underwhelming... we know he has some skills to provide the long ball but his defensive work is piss poor and he gives the ball away too cheaply and far too often... finally, the enigma himself, Ozil, so much skill with his left foot but his presence has been more frustrating than uplifting... in many respects his failure has been directly related to the failure of this club to provide him with the necessary players up front, minus Sanchez of course, and unless something drastic happens very soon his legacy will be largely a negative one (much like Wenger'
in the EPL... both have showed some great energy on the pitch, but neither are top quality and no good team can afford to have that many average players on their bench playing the same position, especially with Coq's injury
history / discipline concerns and Elheny's headless chicken tendencies... as for Xhaka, his tenure here so far has been incredibly underwhelming... we know he has some skills to provide the long ball but his defensive
work is piss poor and he gives the ball away too cheaply and far too often... finally, the enigma himself, Ozil, so much skill with his left foot but his presence has been more frustrating than uplifting...
in many respects his failure has been directly related to the failure of this club to provide him with the necessary players up front, minus Sanchez of course, and unless something drastic happens very soon his legacy will be largely a negative one (much like Wenger'
in many respects his failure has been directly related to the failure of this club to provide him with the necessary players up front, minus Sanchez of course, and unless
something drastic happens very soon his legacy will be largely a negative one (much like Wenger's)
@ Ivan yes the older fans r quite aware that arsenal was
in d same category with d likes of Everton and Aston villa before the arrival of Wenger, while arsenal has climb mountains courtesy of Wenger's ingenuity, hard
work, smartness, and sheer brilliance the other ones has remained dormant and one eve suffered relegation,, even when d owners of of arsenal fc has not backed him with mighty cash, he transformed arsenal to one of d most valuable club
in d world today, and one of d richest club
in d world today, he didn't stop there, he went ahead to win 17 trophies for arsenal fc, it amazes me how some pple who has never contributed any thing to d growth of arsenal fc will be ranting every day here insulting the greatest manager
in d
history of afc bcos u could afford 10mb data is ridiculous, for ur information u have bragging right today as an arsenal fan courtesy of what Wenger offered u, the golden trophy, and 49 unbeaten run is
something that can take another generation to match,
Society and cultural norms and
history have made marriage
something that seems totally normal, when
in reality, only certain types of people and certain types of personalities are going to be naturally able to make marriage
work.
I just got
in touch with Vital Proteins and they said it's
working in their system, but if it's not
working for you then it most likely has
something to do with your computer cookies or browser
history settings.
The Museum exhibits
works originating from all ages
in history, so you will definitely find
something that will interest both you and your date.
Three dance sequences exist
in a vacuum (testing the sequel maxim that if one of
something works in the first, three of that same
something must
work better
in the second), Barrymore proves that she can't act
in not one but three languages, and Jaclyn Smith turns
in what may be the most bizarre self - referential cameo
in recent
history.
Re-writing the greatest
work of the most infamous wit
in English
history is, perhaps, not
something to be taken lightly.
It's
in the one extended sequence with Moore that the film
works best as a cohesive package,
in which Ford restrains himself and lets Firth and Moore create a potently passionate portrait of long - term friendship, with all the unspoken
history, tender affection, and the not - so - paradoxical simmering bitterness that can sometimes go along with that... particularly when one friend may want
something different out of the relationship than the other does.
As a Facing
History program associate and former history teacher, I try to work in activities and lessons that build critical reading skills, which got me thinking: What if an educator were to do something similar using film clips and text - dependent que
History program associate and former
history teacher, I try to work in activities and lessons that build critical reading skills, which got me thinking: What if an educator were to do something similar using film clips and text - dependent que
history teacher, I try to
work in activities and lessons that build critical reading skills, which got me thinking: What if an educator were to do
something similar using film clips and text - dependent questions?
The overall premise of the device doesn't change — this is still
something that
works best if you're heavily invested
in Amazon's products and services already — but if
history is any indicator, the Fire HDX 8.9 will be a good tablet for reading books, browsing the web, and of course, watching lots of Prime Instant Video content.
It wasn't an easy undertaking, requiring not just one of TV
history's rarer artifices still
in working condition but also a number of other old machines to help transform modern HDMI signals into
something a 1970s CRT could comprehend.
On the other hand, though the group of painters represented here form a tight - knit «generation» (one constraint of the show is that all the artists were born between 1939 and 1949), and though the selected
works originate from the same period and place, the
works are aesthetically independent enough to resist any easy categorization according to style or aims... Rubinstein's curation
in Reinventing Abstraction proposes
something — an idea, a possible
history — that may connect with others but which is, nevertheless, its own.
American painter Mark Bradford has moved away from paint itself and uses materials such as liquefied paper
in his
work, material that «has
something to do with the social fabric of the times we live
in, and not just to do with the
history of art.»
«It's also nice to have
something that came with such a rich
history with Chinese literati and the rich
history of pen ink and how it's used as a tag
in China,» adds Odutola, who is now
working in Alabama on her May solo show for Jack Shainman Gallery
in New York City.
In her epigraph, Albers honours the role that education and
history has made to her
work and this is
something that is also important to me within my practice.
In renewing a consistent theme throughout art history, Simeone's latest body of work highlights the artist's interest in the way a picture can also be an object in and of itself, not simply a representation of somethin
In renewing a consistent theme throughout art
history, Simeone's latest body of
work highlights the artist's interest
in the way a picture can also be an object in and of itself, not simply a representation of somethin
in the way a picture can also be an object
in and of itself, not simply a representation of somethin
in and of itself, not simply a representation of
something.
Hewitt's
work is significant for the ways
in which it questions
history, memory, time, and the language of images, but
something gets lost when neatly matched to one of those topics alone.
Work just a few months later, using
something as difficult to control and deep
in its
history as gold leaf, reminds me that his technical skill still has a magic all its own.
KK: I like to
work with artists and the space, and try to find
something that
works well with the
history of the place, or the physicality of the architecture, so I'd love to
work with Wangechi Mutu, an African artist based
in New York.
I have no nostalgia for TV back
in the day, but I think there is
something very beautiful about having the simultaneity of these different
histories of technology all being compressed together
in this one
work.
She creates a personal and contemporary fiction within her
works, bringing to light issues of race and representation throughout the
history of traditional figurative painting: «My
work is a form of tribute, analysis and intervention: tribute out of sincere admiration for the figurative tradition; analysis, by making
something vast,» the role of race
in the
history of figurative painting «comprehensible to both myself and to my viewers; and intervention, by positioning a woman - of - color as primary picture - maker,
in whose hands the figurative tradition is refashioned.»
Like Young, Bradford represented his nation at last year's Venice Biennale and,
in what was
something of a monumental year for the American, unveiled Pickett's Charge, a suitably monumental suite of paintings (collectively measuring more than 100 linear metres) that reinterpreted one of the defining moments of the American Civil War (the subject of an 1883 cyclorama by French painter Paul Philippoteaux, itself reinterpreted
in Bradford's
work)
in a
work of cut, torn and scraped layers that reflects on the complexities of
history, its interpretation and its impact upon the present sociopolitical climate
in the US.
«Performer», naturally, draws on film's long
history with performance, used alongside
works which have a highly important live element to them, yet creating
something that
in many ways stands alone as film also.
A physical counterpart to the
work is included
in the exhibition Looking at one thing and thinking of
something else, Part one: Dialogues with Art
History, Carroll / Fletcher Eastcastle Street, 11 November — 26 November 2016 (the online exhibition can be viewed here and details of the physical exhibition can be found here).
Santu Mofokeng, whose
works were part of the exhibition, regards landscape as
something much broader
in its relation to memory, markings, and
history.
A new
work by Tuymans is always
something to behold and this fairly menacing oil on canvas rates high
in conveying the artist's fascination with
history.
New Directions
in the Art of the Moving Image, Smithsonian Museum of American Art, Washington D.C., US Images of the Mind, Deutsches Hygiene - Museum, Dresden, DE The Art of Deceleration, Kunstmuseum Wolfsburg, DE Space Invaders, Nikolaj Kunsthal, Copenhagen, DK Jihlava Documentary Film Festival, Jihlava, CZ Celebrazione Vasariane, Firenze Arti Visive, Florence, IT Ensemble 20/21, Auditorio Nacional de Música, Madrid, ES MMK 1991 - 2011: 20 Years of the Contemporary, MMK, Frankfurt, DE Oslo Chamber Music Festival 2011 - Gamle Logen, Oslo, NO Pino Pascali: Return to Venice / Apulia Contemporary Art, Palazzo Bianchi Michiel, Venice, IT The Missing Peace: Artists Consider the Dalai Lama, San Antonio Museum of Art, Texas, US Portraits de la Pensée, Palais des Beaux - Arts de Lille, FR Paradise Lost, Istanbul Museum of Modern Art, TR The Quintet of the Unseen, Blain Southern London, UK art / tapes / 22 a Santa Teresa (1972 - 76), Forno San Ferdinando, Follonica, IT Tout ouïe, Sans Canal Fixe, Tours, FR 2011 Images and Views of Alternative Cinema, Theatro Ena, Nicosia, CY New contemporary galleries featuring the John Kaldor Family Collection, Art Gallery New South Wales, Sydney, AU The Promised Land, Staatliche Kunstsmmlungen Dresden, DE Don't Look Now, Kunstmuseum Bern, CH Figuratively Speaking: A Survey of the Human Form, Bellagio Gallery, Las Vegas, US Happy Tech: machines with a human face, Palazo Re Enzo (1/29 -2 / 13) & La Triennale / Bovisa, Milan, IT La Candela Festival 2011, Valls, ES The Unbearable Lightness of Being, Yvon Lambert Gallery, Paris, FR San Sebastian, una iconografia comtemporánea, Kubo - Kutxa, Donostia - San Sebastian, ES When Painting Moves...
Something Must Be Rotten, Stenerson Museum, Oslo, NO Knock on wood: Tales from the forest, Virserums Konsthall, SE Space, Foundazione MAXXI, Rome, IT Lust and Vice: The Seven Deadly Sins from Dürer to Nauman, Zentrum Paul Klee, Bern, CH When Eve Meets Adam, Museum of Fine Arts, Strasbourg, FR A Million and One Days, Lithuanian National Gallery of Art, Vilnius, LT The Missing Peace: Artists Consider the Dalai Lama, Nobel Museum, Stockholm, SE Tong, Haeinsa Temple, Chiin - ri, KR Esplanade — The Recital Studio, SG Video, An Art, A
History 1965 - 2010: A Selection from the Centre Pompidou and Singapore Art Museum Collections, SG Déserts (1994), Tokyo Symphony Orchestra, Suntory Hall, Tokyo, JP Shan Shui, Beijing Center for the Arts, CN Environmental Day, ikono.tv / MELD, Television Broadcast, Arabsat: Menasa Region, Etisalat, AE Selected
works from the Centre Pompidou's New Media Collection, Herzliya Museum of Contemporary Art, IL
The artists on view
in Outsider Art also share
something beyond their often improvisational methods of art - making: Their
works are woven together by common threads such as religion, the mystical world of animals, pop culture and icons of American
history.
Though the exhibition does recognize their role
in assembling those
works, the purpose of the exhibition is to examine the interplay of artistic creativity
in African and African American art —
something that has been part of our museum's
history since our founding more than 50 years ago.
Both concluded with a somewhat mysterious room of «late
works» which left it unclear whether that meant late
in the artist's biography (a Baziotes from 1961, but then he died the next year), late
in the
history of abstract Expressionism (a figurative Guston from 1976) or
something else entirely — a Motherwell from 1949 and a Sam Francis from 1952 fitted neither category.
The intention is that the
works in Every Day Matters should represent exploration and reflection by stopping and taking hold of
something from the day, from
history or from memory.
The
works included
in this aptly titled «Late Calligraphic Stains» exhibition hearken back to the
work of icons of mid-century art
history: Pollock, Rothko, and Twombly among them, but Christensen's handling brings
something truly unique to the conversation.
Actually, there is some interesting
work being done by Matt Huber of Purdue, following up on some earlier ideas of Emanuel's, suggesting that the role of TCs
in transporting heat from equator towards the poles may be more significant than previously thought — it also allows for some interesting, though admittedly somewhat exotic, mechanisms for explaining the «cool tropics paradox» and «equable climate problem» of the early Paleogene and Cretaceous periods, i.e. the problem of how to make the higher latitudes warm without warming the tropics much,
something that appears to have happened during some past warm epochs
in Earth's
history.
If you have
something atypical
in your medical
history whether past or present, then you will need to
work with an agent only.
Given Valve's lack of
history in the venture capital space, Nitero must be
working on
something very unique to capture the gaming company's interest.
In conclusion, you might throw the term «fast learner» or something similar into your resume's professional summary, but this will only benefit you if you're able to back up this claim with proof points in your work history sectio
In conclusion, you might throw the term «fast learner» or
something similar into your resume's professional summary, but this will only benefit you if you're able to back up this claim with proof points
in your work history sectio
in your
work history section.
Whether asking about the
history of a certain company or incident, how
something works in science, finance, or venture capital, salary negotiation, or even for relationship advice, Quora spans a wide number of topics with a Q&A style format.
If you are
in school,
something like «Volunteerism,» «Associations,» or «Academic Projects» might be more important than
work history, and that should go after education and before
work.
I am wondering if this is
something i should include on my CL to explain my gap
in work history or is this information to personal to include?
In the
Work History section of your resume, explain any employment gaps by inserting a «job title» (full - time parent, volunteer, student, independent study, travel abroad) that is relevant to your job objective, or at least says
something positive about your character.
Something like this
works... Salary
history is confidential information to be supplied
in the interview - or - I have always been paid a salary commensurate to the job I have held.
Combination resumes are used for unique cases where people have big gaps
in their
work history or are transferring from
something like the military to public employment.
For those of you
in the middle of a career change or who might just be starting out, a resume objective statement allows you to define your goal to a potential employer...
something that your
work history (or lack thereof) might not otherwise be able to do for you.