Not exact matches
At the recent press day, Core, Ramirez, Bracey, wingsuit stunt pilot Jeb Corliss, professional free climber Chris Sharma, Alcon producers Andrew A. Kosove and Broderick Johnson, and 2nd unit director Philip Boston talked about how they went about creating the ultimate sports movie, how the actors viewed their characters and built the bro - mance, the challenges of coordinating a production that shot around the world in 11 countries and on 4 continents, why all the 2nd unit work was shot prior to the first unit work, why vision and authenticity were paramount, why the
imagination, energy and focus required to shoot a film in camera is much greater than when
visual effects are used everywhere, and why it
took courage to make this film.
Directed by Tony ® - winner Diane Paulus (Pippin, Hair) with book by Olivier Award ® - nominee James Graham, music and lyrics by Gary Barlow (
Take That) and Grammy Award ® - winner Eliot Kennedy, and choreography by Emmy Award ® - winner Mia Michaels («So You Think You Can Dance,» Cirque du Soleil's Delirium), this new musical, packed with mesmerizing
visuals, irresistible songs and plenty of laughs, is a timeless story about the power of
imagination... and spectacular proof that you never really have to grow up.
Fagen cites a Shakespearean device, in which the pivotal act of a play, such as a murder,
takes place off - stage, thereby using the audience's
imagination as an essential tool beyond the
visual action of the drama.
In the exhibition catalogue, Carolyn Lanchner, retired Curator of Painting and Sculpture at The Museum of Modern Art, writes: Jaffe's manipulation of the
visual takes the basics, lines, forms, colors, and allows them every freedom her extraordinary
imagination can devise, while vigilantly suppressing any errant tendencies towards tactile effects on a uniformly flat surface without material density -LSB-...] Explaining her procedures, she once described how she holds off as long as possible choosing among the «myriad solutions» that occur to her during the making of a painting.
Like that lazy summer stroll you've imagined, Summer Reverie allows the viewer to
take in various works of art by numerous artists, linger longer in front of something that catches your eye and
imagination and spend time enjoying the
visual pleasure of the artists» work.
Artist Andrew Cornell Robinson curated this nine - artist outdoor exhibition, which will
take over a parking lot in Ridgewood, and though its curatorial premise is so incredibly vague it sounds like satire — «This exhibition sets out to examine the idea that the condition of the interdisciplinary
imagination has the potential to create new forms and
visual experiences» — the lineup, from an artist who dresses as Bigfoot to a ceramicist who makes apocalyptic office furniture, sounds fantastic.
Let your
imagination run wild and choose pieces that will have a real
visual impact and
take pride of place in your home.