Sentences with phrase «where central elements»

Not exact matches

There is a critical element to these concerns, however, which forms the central distinction between episodes in history where overvalued markets continued higher, and episodes that quickly became vulnerable to free - falls and crashes.
Where Massing differs is in his undoubtedly correct emphasis on treatment as the central element in any new drug policy.
In the years since Copenhagen, those inside and outside the political drama of what goes on at the UNFCCC process have come to recognise the multilevel, multilayered nature of global climate action, where an intergovernmental treaty is just one, and perhaps not even the most central, element.
The three central control elements of the air conditioning system now reside where the MMI monitor was situated in the previous model.
The pistol isn't a fun weapon to use, and the sheer number of enemies mean that you're over-exposed to a central element of the game called «glory kills», where you finish off an enemy with a brutal melee attack.
As in his earlier Storm paintings where scraping gestures that erased figurative components became central to the composition, Cooke again uses abstract elements as building blocks for his new work.
Sun Stream (camera obscura), the site - specific intervention into the Museum's camera obscura, utilizes both analog and digital technology to reveal how we are at a point where light, traditionally the most central element of photography, has become disembodied from the natural world.
One element of the Guggenheim design that has become an archetype for many exhibition buildings, particularly in recent times, is the principle of a museum as a whole space, uninterrupted and interconnected, where all parts overlook one another, usually through a large central void.
The choice of works is very deliberate with the exhibition broken down into seven themes: Beauty, Power and Space, which looks at each artist's engagement with the sublime, a theme central to English Romantic art but which survived through the modernist movement and is a key feature of Twombly's paintings; Atmosphere, which considers the ways in which the three artists paint land and sea through a filter of atmospheric conditions; Naught so Sweet as Melancholy, named after a phrase in Robert Burton's Anatomy of Melancholy, where the theme of loss and memorialisation are central concerns; The Seasons which reflects upon the passage of time; Fire and Water where all three artists evince the power of the elements; The Vital Force which brings together works of a sensual or erotic nature; and finally A Floating World where each artist contemplates mortality and external events that impact on their lives.
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