Sentences with phrase «than any painter in»

More intensely than any painter in our history, he offers a specific, objective, national experience.

Not exact matches

«My husband and I probably spend more than the average person on groceries, as we both love to cook... perhaps $ 168 per week,» says Delorys Welch - Tyson, a U.S. writer and painter who has lived in Nice full - time since 1998.
But I think we have risen above this distinction and can recognize in the activity of the painter and the sculptor, no less than in that of the poet and the dancer, the emancipation from the «deadliness of doing» that distinguishes art from «work.»
Probably no Mexican painter is better known than Diego Rivera, whose murals adorn so many public buildings in Mexico.
In this study I have referred more than once to the Isenheim altar - piece by the medieval painter Grünewald.
Snaith the sailor, like Snaith in tota, is man unconfined, usually human and still unsterilized — a painter often in need of a canvas larger than he can stretch on a frame.
And, in the comments, a supposedly self - professed conservative transhumanist, Rev. Thomas Scott Painter, have a different opinion about life extension than Ilia Stambler and G. Stolyarov II:
DC 9 represents more than 11,000 painters, decorators, glaziers, and paint makers in the city.
According to a recent study led by Gábor Horváth, a biological physicist at Eötvös University in Hungary, cave painters understood — better than many artists of the modern age — the laws governing animal motion.
When Corrie Painter was diagnosed with cancer six years ago, she did what any other doctoral student in biochemistry would do: She looked up her disease on PubMed, the giant online database of more than 26 million medical papers.
Dr. James Painter of Eastern Illinois University, found that people who consume in - shell pistachios consume 41 percent fewer calories than those who consume them without shells.
Meditation delays molecular aging 12.06.2012 Lower your heart rate and live longer 22.05.2012 Just 15 minutes» walking per day extends life expectancy 14.05.2012 Contented men live longer, contented women don't 29.04.2012 Survival tip: eat chicken instead of beef 23.04.2012 Contented people live longer 22.04.2012 Walking, not running, delays cell aging 05.04.2012 Stay fit and untroubled by negative feelings for a long life 04.04.2012 Grow old healthily with green tea 11.03.2012 Watching TV is soooo bad for you 29.02.2012 Live longer with monounsaturated fatty acids 22.02.2012 Exercise delays aging as much as caloric restriction does 02.02.2012 Get fit, delay aging 30.01.2012 How beta - alanine can extend your life expectancy 27.01.2012 Being fit protects your cells from rusting 26.01.2012 High blood sugar level makes you look older 22.01.2012 Optimists live longer 24.12.2011 Yoga makes diabetics healthier 29.11.2011 Belief in a just world extends life expectancy 27.11.2011 Sleep better — live longer 25.11.2011 Forgive and live longer 28.10.2011 Probiotic bacteria LKM512 extends lifespan in animal study 24.10.2011 Animal study: Royal Jelly has life extending properties 18.10.2011 L - Arginine: «the best anti-aging remedy» 02.10.2011 Test - tube study: ashwagandha inhibits Alzheimer's 10.08.2011 Live longer — take carnosine 04.08.2011 Creatine - Q10 combination protects brain cells and lengthens lifespan: animal study 15.07.2011 Fish oil helps aging mice live longer 02.07.2011 Hard workers live longer 12.06.2011 Supercentenarians are extremely healthy 06.06.2011 Why sculptors live longer than painters 03.06.2011 Afternoon nap helps you live longer 01.06.2011 Calorie burning reduces mortality in elderly 17.05.2011 Eat more beans and live longer 11.05.2011 Raise your VO2max to delay ageing 18.04.2011 Lithium in drinking water helps you live longer 16.04.2011 Nonagenarians with resilience will make it to 100 14.04.2011 Royal Jelly rejuvenates pituitary: animal study 02.04.2011 Four healthy habits can prolong your life by fourteen years 19.03.2011 The rejuvenating effect of 45 minutes» running every day: animal study 28.01.2011 So vitamin E does extend life expectancy... 27.11.2010 Carnosine extends lifespan in animal study 10.11.2010 BCAAs extend lifespan in animal study 28.10.2010 Elderly are fitter with Cordyceps sinensis 08.10.2010 Glucosamine and chondroitin users live longer 24.06.2010 Rhodiola rosea extends life in animal study 18.06.2010 Runners» testes stay young 10.06.2010 Drink green tea instead of water — and live longer 24.05.2010 Low - carb diet delays aging and promotes health 19.05.2010 Q10 makes worms live longer 09.05.2010 Diet of coffee, nuts and berries keeps you healthy 26.04.2010 Delay aging without hunger with life extenders in green apples 19.04.2010 Endogenous growth hormone keeps older athletes young 09.04.2010 Men who take ginseng live longer 19.03.2010 Animal study: Canadian longevity stacker works 05.03.2010 Human study: omega - 3 fatty acids delay molecular ageing 08.02.2010 Fish oil lengthens life in animal study 07.02.2010 Curious?
More: Exercise delays aging as much as caloric restriction does 02.02.2012 Why sculptors live longer than painters 03.06.2011 Calorie burning reduces mortality in elderly 17.05.2011
And honestly speaking, I've never wanted to paint more than in this look, it's modern and yet captures every idea of an urban painter decades ago.
Synopsis: This is the true story of Frida Kahlo (Salma Hayek) and her husband Diego Rivera (Alfred Molina), the larger - than - life painters who became the most acclaimed artists in Mexican history, and whose tempestuous love affair, landmark journeys to America, and outrageous personalities made them legendary.
It may be news to many, but in addition to creating such larger - than - life characters as The Silence of the Lambs» Hannibal Lecter and Howards End's Henry Wilcox (not to mention, once upon a time, the titular protagonist in James Ivory's Surviving Picasso), Welsh thespian Sir Anthony Hopkins has been engaged in a different kind of artistry, mounting a parallel career as a painter.
Invited to Suwon for a screening of one of his films, arthouse director Ham Cheon - soo (Jeong Jae - yeong) finds himself spending the day hanging out with aspiring painter Hee - jeong (Kim Min - hee), leading to a checklist of Hong - isms: comically awkward conversations over food, followed by even more awkward scenes of people apologizing; strangely contentious interactions with new acquaintances; jumbled chronology; characters standing around in the cold for much longer than they should.
And it's hard to imagine a more hospitable moment than right now for a commercially viable movie based on the life of Lili Elbe, a Danish painter in the 1920s who — with the help of a supportive wife (played by Ex Machina and Man From U.N.C.L.E. newcomer Alicia Vikander)-- became the first person in history to undergo a male - to - female sex - change operation.
More than six years in the making with the help of 125 specially trained painters, Loving Vincent is a uniquely animated film composed of 65,000 painted frames — Watch trailer below!
A film like Live Free or Die Hard owes large swaths of its existence to this film more than it does to its own primogenitor in terms of fluid elegance, colour schema (Bigelow's training is as a painter), and flat - out ballsiness.
True, it still may be best known in «film circles,» but considering it has been seen by more people than Julia and The Maid combined (two films considerably more «buzzed about» in advance by the awards season soothsayers), for the purposes of this discussion, it's a veritable blockbuster — the Avatar of French painter bio-pics.
Rudolf is a proud man, more a painter than a spy, never in denial of his actions or culpability for them.
This bland Brooklyn is as gritty as Singing in the Rain's Los Angeles, a scene - painter's chocolate box version, rather than a place teeming with noisy, smelly life.
In many ways, Fulci's work has more to do with the visceral manipulation of materials favored by postwar Italian painters than it does with the narrative fantasies of his predecessors (Mario Bava) and contemporaries (Dario Argento).
Of the no less than seven new features showcased in the Estonian Film competition this year, the standout was The Days That Confused, a debut feature that marks 28 year - old filmmaker and painter Triin Ruumet out as a distinctive new auteurial voice.
Language: English Genre: Romance / Musical MPAA rating: PG Director: Vincente Minnelli Actors: Gene Kelly, Oscar Levant, Leslie Caron Plot: An unsuccessful American painter in Paris finds a companion in someone who loves his work as much as he does... does she love more than just that?
Director Julian Schnabel is also an artist; in fact, he prefers to be known as a painter rather than as a filmmaker.
PAINTERS: If you are submitting samples of fully - painted (traditionally or digitally painted) cover work, keep in mind that Dynamite Entertainment covers tend toward iconic shots of single characters rather than groups of characters or storytelling elements.
It's much more durable than painter's tape and allows for more creativity in terms of shapes and patterns.
But of course truth can be stranger than other things, and Neil Gaiman, in Neil Gaiman's Fantasy Painting — here in The Economist's Intelligent Life — doesn't have to embellish a single thing about the painter and writer Richard Dadd's life, 1817 - 1886.
The company also got a crew of painters in and, happily, the house began to smell more like wet latex than fried polyester.
Famous for its painter's community, Ubud is special in more ways than one.
The painters and sculptors of the Italian Renaissance are most noted for their melding of religion and realism; the Romantic movement in England, appropriately, centered on the artist's individual feelings and motivations while still making the language accessible to the common reader; China's Tang Dynasty allowed art and poetry became more popular among the middle and lower classes than ever before, and while landscapes and nature remained the focal point of most art, increased contact with new foreign countries expanded their own artists» techniques.
The feminist's first reaction is to swallow the bait, hook, line and sinker, and to attempt to answer the question as it is put: i.e., to dig up examples of worthy or insufficiently appreciated women artists throughout history; to rehabilitate rather modest, if interesting and productive careers; to «re-discover» forgotten flower - painters or David - followers and make out a case for them; to demonstrate that Berthe Morisot was really less dependent on Manet than one had been led to think — in other words, to engage in the normal activity of the specialist scholar who makes a case for the importance of his very own neglected or minor master.
«the canvas began to appear to one American painter after another as an arena in which to act - rather than as a space in which to reproduce, redesign, analyse or «express» an object, actual or imagined.
There are no obstacles in the way of a woman becoming a painter or sculptor other than the usual obstacles that any artist has to face.
Art schools, perceived as little more than a breeding ground for near - do - wells and bohemians, have been disenfranchised in this country, their buildings abandoned or reallocated, and the treasured notion of being tutored by professional painters and sculptors who could pass on many hard earned skills, abandoned.
Tal R remarks: «Bonnard and Matisse are much more dangerous to get close to than some Surrealist painter from Helsinki in the 1940s.
That's always what interested me, even when I was a very young painter... I decided if I was going to talk about paintings in which you were seeing reality... talk about the act of observation, I had to get closer to how I observed rather than just use as a model how everyone else observed.
It seems clear, to take France in the 19th century as an example, a country which probably had a larger proportion of women artists than any other — that is to say, in terms of their percentage in the total number of artists exhibiting in the Salon — that «women were not accepted as professional painters
Though one of them paints images and the other does not, one might well feel that they have much more in common than either one does with a painter who prefers to work on a grand scale and with reference to important public issues.
When he returned to painting in the Bay Area in mid-1965 his resulting works summed up all that he had learned from his more than a decade as a leading figurative painter.
René Ricard, another genius of bohemia, called Rice the «greatest living painter of the city, and in his painting there is no other city than New York, black New York.»
Personally, as a painter who's been making sculpture as a way back to painting, if that ever occurs, few painters today seem to add anything new to painting unless they admit to themselves, as I finally did, that painting is nothing more, and nothing less, than flattened sculpture, which in turn is a subset of drawing.
As a realist painter, over the past 50 years, he has exhibited in more than 250 exhibitions and won over 150 awards.
The city hosted three retrospectives of painters whose oeuvres generate interest less through a command of the medium than through a strident emphasis on (or indulgence in) idiosyncrasy.
A painter associated with the sites and people of England's industrial North West, Lowry, who died in 1976 in his eighty - ninth year, is probably not known anywhere beyond his homeland, which is too bad in that he is a more invitingly strange and idiosyncratic artist than Sickert, Freud, and Hockney combined.
Frequently pigeonholed as the last great English romantic painter in the vein of Constable and Turner, Hodgkin is more incendiary than that — a sunburst of an artist who exploded counterintuitively from a British visual culture temperamentally uneasy at depicting sensuality or expressing intellectual thoughts.
Lennon, Weinberg, Inc., New York, NY: In the spring of 1965, Joan Mitchell had her seventh and final exhibition at the historic Stable Gallery in New York where her career as a painter had been launched more than a decade earlieIn the spring of 1965, Joan Mitchell had her seventh and final exhibition at the historic Stable Gallery in New York where her career as a painter had been launched more than a decade earliein New York where her career as a painter had been launched more than a decade earlier.
She is no more representative of her generation than De Keyser is of his, but like him she has been a favorite of fellow painters, most notably, in her case, Mary Heilmann, whose gloss of Greenbaum's early work is worth quoting here, for the sake of its descriptive energy (which matches the nondescriptive energy of the paintings) and the way it highlights how Greenbaum's work has changed: «Joanne seemed to be remembering the atmosphere of a festive female experience of the 60s.
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