Sentences with phrase «title refers»

Esper says the title refers to the number of people lost on 9/11.
The «instant» of the show's title refers to the car accident of Futurist poet F. T. Marinetti, who famously dramatized the crash as a moment of epiphany in his Futurist Manifesto of 1909.
Titled Weeping Angel, Paglen's banner shows an angel with its face in its hands — the title refers to a CIA technology used to hack into Smart TVs in order to spy on people.
The word editions in the title refers to the television format and to the photographic offset process Richard uses in his work.
According to the press statement, the veil of the title refers to the space between this realm and the next, and each epic title names a different one.
The title refers to the name stickers, popular in the graffiti scene, with twist on the name emphasizing the playfulness of the work
The show's title refers to the professions and passions of Bashford Dean, who lived in Wave Hill House, one of the homes on the property, from 1909 until his death in 1928.
Its title refers to the ostensible subject, to the stretched canvas as an object and, through its pun, to the formalism that still ruled critical discourse in the mid -»60s.
Its title refers to the term for discarded remains of ceramic objects damaged during the firing process.
The exhibition's title refers to a visual device used in landscape painting, in which the painter includes an object in the foreground as a means of framing the view of the landscape.
The title refers to the fact that, during the siege, the Sarajevans were advised not to wear bright colours that might alert the snipers in the hills above to their movements.
The show title refers to an in depth exploration of the beautiful.bizarre aesthetic, rendered through the use of different mediums, themes and materials.
The title refers to the tragic loss of Orozco's left hand at the age of 21, while he was making fireworks to celebrate Mexico's Independence Day.
The title refers to the Declaration of Independence and our current political nightmare «as a backdrop for art works that expose the hollowness of proliferating misrepresentations in the name of power.»
The title refers to maintaining a balance between natural and social forces, new technologies and historical styles.
The sculpture's title refers to a short story by American horror fiction author Stephen King about a forsaken farm town taken over by a cult.
The project title refers to the area between the 63rd and the 77th steps.
The exhibition's title refers to the fundamental transience of modern life — the constant process of creation, destruction, and transformation in the material just as much as the immaterial.
In this show — whose title refers to Bernardo Bertolucci's film of 1990 rather than the 1949 Paul Bowles novel on which it was based — Saleme
The title refers to a common misquotation of a phrase of Chairman Mao's («Let a hundred flowers bloom»).
The title refers both to the name given to territory occupied by landless or homeless settlers and to the sacred areas designated for worship in Candomblé, a religion practiced mainly in Brazil, which draws its beliefs from various African traditions and is historically associated with slaves» resistance.
The exhibition title refers to the concept of «grounding» in communication theory, and the works featured test whether «communication partners» do in fact share common knowledge and whether a «global realignment», as changes in the Gulf region are thought by some to be, is possible.
In my mind the title refers to the object's uncanny ability to hide in plain site, much like a chameleon.
The word «aubade» in the title refers to a song or poem about lovers separating at dawn, a popular trope of European lyric poetry from the Middle Ages to the 16th century.
The title refers to the artists» status in the mainstream art world — whilst largely unknown, their respective practices are greatly admired by their artistic peers.
The show's title refers to a fragment written by Isamu Noguchi in a letter addressed to Man Ray in which he shares his frustration of being held captive in an internment camp in Poston, Arizona.
The title refers to the Autodromo di Pergusa, a three - mile racetrack around Pergusa Lake near the city of Enna in Sicily.
Quoted from Song Dynasty poet Huang Tingjian's verse, «Seize the flower in the mirror, catch the moon in the water,» the exhibition title refers to the fruitlessness of capturing the moon from its reflection.
The project title refers to the renowned text «Rhizome», written by Gilles Deleuze and Félix Guattari, in which the authors describe the contact between different realms of experience as a possibility for mutual complementation and fertile combinations.
Since its title refers to a book by the French philosopher Michel Foucault, you know that big ideas are afoot.
The title refers to the non-linear and atemporal modus operandi that Gioscia has adopted throughout the last few years.
Like Scorched Earth, 2006 (Broad Museum, Los Angeles), Helter Skelter I's title refers to a real moment of racial tension in American history.
The lecture's title refers to the lines by poet William Carlo Williams: It is difficult / to get the news / from poems / yet men die miserably every day / for lack / of what is found there.
The title refers to a form of reverse psychology used in family psychotherapy decades ago, and alludes to various conditions and methodologies of memory and the shape of autobiography within the exhibition.
The title itself refers to Bruce Nauman's work Flour Arrangements (1967), a photographic series where Nauman created different compositions using flour on his studio floor every day for a month, subsequently taking photos of the arrangements.
The shared title refers to Deleuze and Guattari philosophical concept in their famous «Anti Oedipe» manifesto (1972).
«Ten Years After» in the show title refers to the length of time since her first child was born.
The title refers to the archaic incantation «Abracadabra» as well as to the homonymous disco song by the Steve Miller Band, popular in the 80s.
The title refers to a Viennese plague column from the 17th century, in which the bubonic plague is represented as a witch; the victory over disease is imagined as the conquering of an unruly and malignant femininity.
The title refers to the fictional planet «Krypton» where Superman was born — Kelley has said the maquettes «function as a constant reminder of Superman's past,» as well as «a metaphor for his alienated relationship to the planet he now occupies.»
The title refers to the fact that the «classic drip paintings were so powerful and so magnificent that they forced a blind spot in our ability to look at other parts of Pollock's practice,» says DMA curator Gavin Delahunty by phone.
The series title refers to the refrain of a poem by Federico García Lorca.
The exhibition title refers to metals that resist corrosion and oxidation, and serves as the conceptual backbone to the fictitious world that Wheat creates in her work.
The title refers to the physiological effects of the life - saving medication, as well as the resulting decrease in media attention that has followed these medical advances.
The enigmatic title refers to the painter's «crown,» a heroic accessory evoked in Aldrich's «Figure with Cape,» (2008) a shakily painted outline of a caped matador with three wooden sticks attached to the canvas surface.
The exhibition's title refers to that portability.
The exhibition's title refers to the experience of being mindful of the present, an idea that is currently being explored in clinical psychology as a tool for helping individuals improve their mental and physical health.
The title refers to the artist Dora Maar, Picasso's lover and muse, who after the break - up of their affair, declared: «After Picasso, Only God.»
The title refers to the 1942 Allied invasion of North Africa.
The title refers to a quality of spirit that exists beyond the frame of the corporeal where time and timelessness intersect.
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