Sentences with phrase «taken as its point of departure»

He takes as his point of departure this statement: «When we serve, we devote ourselves to God, family and country.»
He takes as his point of departure some polling data that suggests a durable unwillingness to vote for a Mormon presidential candidate, a reluctance that has....
Fair enough, except why then did he take as his point of departure Benedict's comments about communion of desire?
It is this — that none of the traditional theories has taken as its point of departure and its key an experiential analysis of the work of love.
In fact, he takes as his point of departure their lack of knowledge, symbolized in the altar «to the unknown god.»
Let us take as our point of departure the formulation of the ontological principle to the effect that «every explanatory fact refers to the decision and to the efficacity of an actual thing.»
It is the exchange between Jesus and the religious authorities on marriage (Mt 19:3 ff; Mk 10:2 ff) that Pope John Paul II takes as his point of departure.
In order to conceive of divine causation we should not take as our point of departure the crude images of transfer of power that we find in the objects of secondary (sense) perception.
This chapter takes as its point of departure and as recurring touchstones several texts of Benedetto Croce and Antonio Gramsci.
Taking as a point of departure the pivotal series of «cuts» produced in the Bronx in the early 1970s that led to his further exploration of the city as a field of action, Gordon Matta - Clark: Anarchitect will examine the artist's pioneering social, relational, and activist approach.
The possibility for new ideas and ways of thinking that evolve from the absurd encapsulate Bas» thinking behind the entire body of work, and he takes as his point of departure the absinthe induced writings and absurdist theatre concocted by Alfred Jarry.
As an artist in residence during the R&D Season: SPECULATION, Knight completed production for Fall to Earth, which takes as its point of departure themes related to socially condemned speech and other forms of silencing or restraint and includes original scores created by different collaborating artists, inspired loosely by Salman Rushdie's magical - realist novel The Satanic Verses and other texts.
Typically made on found vintage paper, Frecon's watercolors, in turn, take as their point of departure the unique characteristics of each leaf of paper she uses.
All Too Human takes as its point of departure the early 20th - century nudes of Walter Sickert RA, whose uningratiating tastelessness seems extraordinary for its time.
In a collaborative program between The Noguchi Museum and Socrates Sculpture Park, artist Leah Raintree discusses her photographic series Another Land, a body of work that takes as its point of departure a 1968 sculpture of the same name by Isamu Noguchi.
The series takes as its point of departure the mirrored gazing ball, a popular yard ornament commonly found in the area around the artist's childhood home in central Pennsylvania.
By pairing three historical paintings of women by men with contemporary portraits of women predominantly by women, the exhibit takes as its point of departure the notion that both reading and authoring representational images is a form of feminist resistance.
Byrne represented Ireland at the 2007 Venice Biennale, where he showed 1984 & Beyond, a film that takes as its point of departure a Playboy article that featured a roundtable discussion with twelve science fiction writers.
Light and the Unseen recognizes this history and takes it as its point of departure, using it as a touchstone for further exploration.
These include her new site - specific project Notes for a Cannon (2016), which takes as its point of departure the Clock Tower that once stood at the Jaffa Gate in Jerusalem.
From May 17 to September 7, 2015, The Museum of Modern Art presents its first exhibition dedicated exclusively to the work of Yoko Ono, taking as its point of departure the artist's unofficial MoMA debut in late 1971.
Taking as a point of departure the play Monsieur Toussaint by Édouard Glissant, Overtures explores the complexities of both translation (from French to Créole) and fiction when looking at Haitian history.
, taking as its point of departure a summer residency turned storefront exhibition that the artist organized at the Cosmopolitan in Las Vegas.
Filmed at the Michael Davis Stained Glass workshop in Long Island City, New York, objects from this session were later given a mirrored surface as part of the artist's Total Reflective Abstraction series of works that took as their point of departure a conversation between Buckminster Fuller and Isamu Noguchi.
The exhibition Humans Come First takes as its point of departure the lesser known and researched tradition of performance art in Poland, starting in the 1960s and 70s.
Taking as point of departure the 1998's provocative collages by the artist Albert Oehlen, this show features the works of eight artists, bringing together older works with new pieces, dealing with the theme of a hegemonic value system.
It takes as its point of departure the work of the Cuban American artist Felix Gonzalez - Torres (1957 - 1996).
Taking as its point of departure the historic competition between the East and West coasts, Sibling Rivalries transforms the traditional «competitive» understanding of the term.
The exhibition takes as its point of departure a moment in the abstract movement of the post-war era, when dominant international vocabularies became entangled with traditional Asian painting in the work of a few artists, working independently and in disparate contexts.
A group exhibition featuring work by a range of Mexico and U.S - based artists takes as its point of departure the»90s NAFTA years, a period of great change, when Mexico came out of a relative period of isolation, and when the local and the global became one.
At Venus Over Manhattan, Harlan takes as his point of departure the book The Descent of the Goddess Ishtar Into the Lower World.
The work is taken as a point of departure.
Taking as its point of departure the paradoxical nature of the self, this volume features substantial essays on and supporting images by such provocative international artists as Janet Cardiff, Maurizio Cattelan, Emanuel Danesch and David Rych, Mario García Torres, Amos Gitai, Jenny Holzer, Dennis Hopper, Jonathan Horowitz, Sanja Ivekovic, Amar Kanwar, David Lamelas, Ján Mancuska, Paul McCarthy, Boris Ondreicka, Sergio Prego, Pipilotti Rist, Hans Schabus, Cindy Sherman, Roman Signer, Monika Sosnowska, Salla Tykkä and Slaven Tolj.
Taking this as a point of departure, the exhibition selects significant moments throughout contemporary art history, beginning with one of the early proponents and a member of Los Angeles» informal Light and Space movement, Robert Irwin.
The rereading takes as its point of departure the socio — political upheavals of the 1960s and considers the Bauhaus, its historical contexts and the history (ies) of its reception from today's perspective.
Past Times reimagines art history, taking as his point of departure Western masterworks of narrative painting such as Giorgione's The Tempest, Édouard Manet's Le Déjeuner sur l'herbe and Georges Seurat's A Sunday on La Grande Jatte.
Taking as its point of departure Lucio Fontana's Spatialism, proclaimed in his Manifestos of 1947 and 1948, «THE GALLANT APPAREL: Italian Art and the Modern» charts a line through the main exponents -LSB-...]
Known for confronting history and addressing political and social issues in his abstract collage paintings, Bradford plans to incorporate figuration in his work for the first time and is «taking as a point of departure» a major Civil War painting.
His most recent sculpture often takes as a point of departure household objects that he models in simple materials, including cardboard, then casts in bronze and patinates with surfaces that recall ceramic glazes.
The so - called Artists» Museum section of Documenta 5 will be taken as point of departure for Alternatives to Ritual to invite artists to present their own artists» museums.
Taking as its point of departure the exhibition Past Disquiet.
Taking as a point of departure Radamés «Juni» Figueroa's Tree House - Club House, 2013, a sculpture / social platform built in the tropical forest of Naguabo, Puerto Rico, Stefan Benchoam (co-director Proyectos Ultravioleta, Ciudad de Guatemala), Pablo Guardiola (co-director Beta Local, San Juan), and Radamés «Juni» Figueroa (artist, San Juan) will discuss generosity as a tool, «tropical» strategies and methodologies, site specificity, networks of influence, and the ways of working in Puerto Rico.
While her approach — which takes as a point of departure the region's long history of abstract art — seems familiar at first glance, the show unfolds into something much more nuanced.

Not exact matches

As it turned out, my point of departure from the «emerging ministry movement» took me more into the missional wing of things, where I've been continuing to work with several virtual, international teams on social transformation projects.
The prophet will not allow us to use faith as a point of departure for taking our journey through life or constructing our morality, ecclesiology, or politics.
Jesus understood the Kingdom of God as being manifest in his ministry; all else in his teaching takes its point of departure from this central, awe - inspiring — or ridicule - inspiring, according to one's perspective — conviction.
Moreover, a supplementary condition is required for the success of an imaginative generalization, insofar as the generalization should always take its point of departure from within some particular branch of human learning.
This provision for such relative and limited autonomy is indeed a key requirement in any theory which takes the whole as primary, since without it there is no way to understand or even account for the fact that partial aspects can be found which may serve as points of departure in the development of knowledge.
One may wonder whether this takes into account the religious attitude in its essence — for the present I put aside the Christian event, which poses still other problems — for the religious attitude appears fundamentally as the expression of a dependence, whatever the point of departure for this dependence may be.
Rather, they argue, Constantinople took a different, though similar, local baptismal creed as its point of departure for reaffirming the «faith of Nicea.»
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