Sentences with phrase «stage curtain»

This setting is complete with stage curtains, and an audience watching the performance at all times.
Perhaps all they have in common with an actual stage curtain, apart from the folds, is the implication of drama.
This continues five or six pages, and on the last, the fire resembles a falling darkness, like a heavy stage curtain.
Think of Pollock's «action painting» as a performance, Rothko's canvases as stage curtains or magician's mirrors best viewed half a room away.
He started walking the wrong way and the officials had to turn him to face the curtain to exit the stage
Using a nearly $ 400,000 grant from Manhattan Borough President Scott Stringer's office and the City Council, volunteers from SHoP Architects transformed the room into a bright, airy space with hidden storage, fabric acoustic paneling, gold stage curtains, a mirrored wall and green - accented décor.
Students in choir robes sang the gospel arrangement in front of the auditorium stage curtains.
James» steady rove through unrelenting stage curtains, dollhouse proportions, nostalgic television sets, and the cues of bourgeois place - settings in Present Time identifies her increasingly less as a chic marauder and more as a pantomime of humorous delight springing from her environment like Chutes and Ladders.
Junichi Arai came often: especially when we made a big stage curtain [Doncho] in Kiryu.
These silhouettes bend, droop, and contort with mind - bending grace, and live in non-places surrounded by stage curtains and two - tone gradients.
The result is monumental and theatrical, akin to an upside - down stage curtain; it's also weirdly girlie and haptic: like an elastic membrane, the fabric muffles any sounds.
Composed of monochrome fabrics often used to create stage curtains, that are then pierced with an assortment of fishing lures; store bought and hand painted «spoon» lures and hand tied «flies».
Think of this simple year - round plan as the rope for the stage curtains.
Taking a break from bold colors, struts into the Vanity Fair and Chanel party in a demure halter with that hemline we've dubbed «the stage curtain
The movie begins and ends with a theatrical metaphor — the raising and lowering of the window shades in Jeff's flat as if they were stage curtains, a symmetry that was brutally violated in Universal's previous rerelease version, which ends instead with the Universal logo.
Spanish director Carlos Saura went as far as hanging on to the stage curtains to stop his own film Peppermint Frappé from screening.
Kristin Wiig, Stiller's co-star in the flick, came out from behind the stage curtain complaining she wasn't mentioned, adding that Stiller told her the presentation was the next day.
Rather than holding bake sales for stage curtains, for example, they organize campaigns to create a public will to fund all schools fully so that all children have the schools and resources that they deserve.
Drape cheap red plastic tablecloths from the ceiling for stage curtains.
He sees Modernism as piercing the stage curtain at last, while losing the sense of the everyday.
Her scalloped edges belong to fabric, perhaps its stage curtain but fallen to the floor.
In instances when there was no existing movie screen, a stage curtain becomes a subtly textured backdrop to the projection.
I was making a stage curtain, and it was the moment before the curtain parted or rose.
Widely regarded as both an artist and designer, White's design for a tapestry that resembles a giant sheet of crumpled silver foil recently won a Norwegian design competition for the stage curtain in the Oslo opera house.
In 2009 he designed the stage curtain for the Winspear Opera House in Dallas, Texas.
The work alludes to the functionality of a household object as much as it does to the theatricality of a stage curtain.
In 2009, Kuitca designed the stage curtain for the new opera house in Dallas commissioned by Foster + Partners.
Los Angeles - based architectural firm Johnston Marklee has created the exhibition design for the show by introducing a zigzag - shaped wall, which functions as a stage curtain.
Bottom: Marc Chagall, stage curtain design for The Firebird, 1945, private collection, © 2017 Artists Rights Society (ARS), New York / ADAGP, Paris.
Originating with Picasso's creation of his largest work, the stage curtain for the ballet Parade, in 1917, the exhibition examines artistic production of that crucial year in light of historical facts and their impacts on the lives of the artists.
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