Sentences with phrase «turn simple objects»

Using the parameters of her own process to guide the outcome, Packer's low - tech installations turn simple objects, light refractions, and shadows into opulent visual displays.

Not exact matches

Word games can be a fun way to build on your young child's excitement about language: Walk around the house taking turns naming as many objects as you can, or construct simple rhymes such as «the pot is hot.»
Most of today's 3D printers work with scraps of plastic or metal and turn them into simple objects.
It looks like a very simple, prosaic object... but when you go to actually make one, it turns out there's lots of little decisions you have to make.
You can open doors and drawers, turn on lights and do things with the occasional object, but otherwise everything is done through the simple act of choosing where to go, sometimes following the linear route and other times choosing which door or direction to head in, although choice is merely an illusion in Layers of Fear.
In one of it's savvier moves, Microsoft intentionally (or so it claims) left the USB port on Kinect wide open, so it's simple to hook up to your computer and let your imagination run wild, with hacks and mods for the Kinect including creating music, turning any stick - like object into a light saber, playing the original Super Mario Bros. by running and jumping, and yes, even playing online poker.
With that simple statement he managed to turn the phenomenological subject / object upside - down.
2009 Moyniham, Miriam, St Louis artist's imagery is intense, The Post-Dispatch, 11 June Rosenberg, Karen, More Over, Humble Doily: Paper Does a Star Turn, The New York Times, 19 October 2008 Applin, Jo, Bric - a-Brac: The Everyday Work of Tom Friedman, Art Journal, Spring, pp.69 - 81 Artner, Alan G, Beautiful art books published on 2008, Chicago Tribune, 13 December Cullinan, Nicholas, Tom Friedman, London, The Burlington Magazine, September, pp. 627 - 629 Jenkins, Amy, The Independent (Review of show at Gagosian Gallery, London), 5 July Johnson, Ken, Hunting a Tribe of Minimalists on the Streets of the Upper East Side, The New York Times, 5 January Johnson, Ken, Unwrapping the Secrets of Ordinary Objects, The New York Times, 17 May Lack, Jessica and Clark, Robert, The Guardian (Review of show at Gagosian Gallery, London), 31 May - 6 June Degen, Natasha, Frieze, June Wilk, Deborah, The Complexity of the Simple, Time Out New York, 17 - 23 January Wallpaper.com, Tom Friedman exhibition, London, 4 June 2006 Otten, Liam, Tom Friedman at Kemper Art Museum, Washington University Record, 26 October Tom Friedman at Gagosian Gallery Beverly Hills, The Week, 24 November Vogel, Carol, Why Small is Big, The New York Times, 17 November Knight, Christopher, Art as a shared experience, Los Angeles Times, 3 November Kastner, Jeffrey, Tom Friedman Feature Inc., Artforum, January, p. 220 Tom Friedman at Gagosian Gallery, Artdaily.com, 26 October
Using simple materials, everyday objects, wry wit and written instructions that encourage people to interact with his sculptures, Erwin Wurm makes spectators into active participants and turns them into living, breathing works of art.»
Examples were Do Ho Suh's simple but staggeringly beautiful display of threaded drawings and pastel rubbings of mundane interior objects on paper at STPI and Nevin Aladag's heavenly - sounding Music Room series, featuring a chair, lamp, hat stand and side table which had been turned into musical instruments at Wentrup Gallery Berlin.
Says Kovanda: «Cheap and simple things can sometimes turn out to be important and extraordinary, while expensive objects can be invisible.»
I often take an object (usually a physical model of the design) and turn it upside down, change the colour, or hold it up to a mirror to change the way I see it, these simple methods often lead to a better idea about what the thing could be.
«Extraordinary: Everyday objects and actions in contemporary art» brings together artists from the UK and Europe who use banal objects or deceptively simple actions to turn the everyday into art.
Prior to age one, infants are able to follow the attention of others, to participate in simple turn - taking games (e.g., pick - a-boo), and to have an understanding of goal - directed behaviours, such as grasping or reaching for an object.
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