Sentences with phrase «tiny human figures»

Chinese artists were, too, though their works aren't traditionally called landscapes because of the commonplace presence of tiny human figures.

Not exact matches

And, when a not - so - tiny child (a teenager, say) figures this out, the 2nd half of the human temperament — the challenging, questioning, inquisitive, experimental, anti-authoritarian part — comes to the fore.
He shows great enthusiasm in flushing the toilet afterwards, and is rather stumped at figuring out the hand washing (sinks are not designed to be accessibility by tiny humans!).
The adventure of raising tiny humans is an ever - changing landscape of highs and lows, and we often feel that just when we're «figuring it out,» everything changes.
A woman develops a tattoo - like mark on her arm, then begins to grow tiny twigs and buds along one arm and she walks away into a meadow, where we see she has become a woody human - shaped plant covered with small flowers and another person develops a figure - 8 mark on one forearm, but she changes no further.
For one, Watson and Mary will try to figure out this whole parenting thing because raising a tiny human is no walk in the park.
Hockney's humor is apparent in works such as Crawling Insects, 1961, where scratched - out figures are accompanied by a trail of insects drawn in ink, as though, frustrated with his depictions of the human figure, the artist decided to draw tiny bugs instead.
«Floor» (1997 - 2005) consisted of glass plates supported by thousands of tiny plastic human figures, packed together and with their hands raised, Atlas - like, to the glass above them.
Christopher Boffoli is a Seattle - based fine art photographer who has created this «Big Appetites» series, in which tiny, detailed human figures pose in real food environments.
Ackroyd is best known for his landscape works which range from tiny etchings to large - scale public murals, and rarely feature human figures.
Thus in the landscape painting of the period we see humans often portrayed as tiny figures in a vast natural setting.
While a human can read a letter and usually figure out what you mean regardless of tiny problems or a misspelled word here or there, a bot is looking for exact matches... not «close enough.»
a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z