Sentences with phrase «whose central feature»

In a review I wrote last February (Daubert Tool Lets Lawyers Track Expert's History, I recommended lawyers try The Daubert Tracker, an expert - witness service whose central feature is a database of all reported decisions interpreting and applying Daubert v. Merrell Dow Pharmaceuticals and Kumho Tire v. Carmichael, backed up when available by full - text briefs, transcripts and docket entries.
Levin if the founder of The Daubert Tracker, an expert witness service whose central feature is a database of decisions interpreting and applying Daubert and its progeny.

Not exact matches

Brand, whose venture capital firm invests in companies led by females, had a high - profile 2017 as an ABJ Profiles in Power winner, ranking among the top female executives in Central Texas, as well as being a featured guest in one of ABJ's monthly Face 2 Face interview events.
It is also without doubt Meadows» finest feature to date — thanks largely to the central performance of his long - time friend (and co-writer) Considine, whose barely contained fury brings a near explosive tension to every scene.
Director Dee Rees and Virgil Williams» screenplay (based on Hillary Jordan's novel) is vast in its ambitions, featuring five major characters — living on a farm in rural Mississippi in the years before, during, and after World War II — whose lives, motives, and hopes are the central concern.
Nikki Baughan: Following in the footsteps of Sarah Gavron's similarly themed Suffragette in its focus on an ordinary woman whose domestic discord opens her eyes to wider issues, this Swiss drama features a brilliant central performance from Marie Leuenberger.
Dominion also features waves of AI soldiers, whose purpose is to fight over the central objective and hold it once taken.
This exhibition opened up a wider and deeper view of a major artist whose drawings underscore a central feature of his work: he has never retreated toward refining complexities or softening the dissonance.
C1S — Coated on one side (paper or print) C2S — Coated on two sides (paper or print) CA2M — Centro de Arte Dos de Mayo (Madrid) CAA — College Art Association CalArts — California Institute for the Arts CACT — Thessaloniki Center of Contemporary Art CAFA — China Central Academy of Fine Arts (Beijing) CAPC — Contemporary Art Museum (Bordeaux) C.G.A.C. — Centro Galego de Arte Contemporanea (Santiago de Compostela) CIFO — Cisneros Fontanals Art Foundation (Miami) CIMAN — International Committee for Museums and Collections of Modern Art CMYK — Cyan, magenta, yellow, and key (black), which are the primary printing colors CNAP — Centre National des Arts Plastiques (Paris) CoBrA — Copenhagen (Co), Brussels (Br), and Amsterdam (A), a free - spirited Marxist avant - garde movement lasting from 1948 to 1951 featuring the artists Asger Jorn, Christian Dotremont, and Constant, whose countries of origins make up the group's name CoCA — Centre of Contemporary Art Znaki Czasu (Torun) CPIF — Centre Photographique d'Ile - de-France CPLY — The name American artist William N. Copley went by as a painter CP — Cancellation proof (the proof made after an edition is finished as evidence that the artist has defaced the plate) C - Print — Chromogenic color print CR — Catalogue raisonnĂ© CTP — Computer to plate, digital printing process
Currently on view at venerable Copenhagen upstart V1 Gallery is Character, a summer group show featuring work by a diverse group of artists to whose work character development is a central theme in a wide range of styles.
Highlights of recent Broad MSU exhibitions include: Trevor Paglen: The Genres; the final installment of the exhibition series The Genres: Portraiture, Still, Life, Landscape, featuring works by social scientist, researcher, and writer Trevor Paglen; Moving Time: Video Art at 50, 1965 - 2015, one of the final exhibitions conceived by Founding Director Michael Rush exploring the development of video art from its earliest presentation, currently on view at the China Central Academy of Fine Arts, Beijing; Material Effects, which brought together six leading artists from West Africa and the diaspora whose work examines the circulation and currency of objects and materials; and The Artist as Activist: Tayeba Begum Lipi and Mahbubur Rahman, the first major museum exhibition to bring together a comprehensive body of work by two of Bangladeshi's foremost contemporary artists.
Notable galleries for 2014 include: Kevin Kavanagh (Dublin), presenting a storytelling series by Sonia Shiel, current ISCP NY artist - in - residence and recipient of Ireland's 2014 Arts Council Project Award; Laura Bulian Gallery (Milan), highlighting career Conceptualist Vyacheslav Akhunov, whose cultural investigations were featured in dOCUMENTA (13) and the 2013 Venice Biennale's Central Asian Pavilion; contemporary Bahamanian art hub Popopstudios (Nassau), spotlighting «everyday» assemblages and mixed - media works by founder John Cox; Frederieke Taylor Gallery (New York), revealing environmental concerns of downtown stalwart Christy Rupp, whose seminal public art projects factored into the 2012 exhibition Come Closer: Art Around the Bowery, 1969 - 1989 at the New Museum; Galerie Heike Strelow (Frankfurt am Main), combining sociopolitical commentary and black humor via Florian Heinke, who curated System of Diplomatic Chaos at Kunstverein Wiesbaden last year; and CONNERSMITH.
The Jewish Museum exhibit in which it was featured is a compact and focused show, curated by a talented young Jewish Museum curatorial assistant, Rachel Furnari, featuring work by seven contemporary artists whose wide - ranging explorations of the complicated intersections of national, ethnic, and sexual identities are central to their artistic practice.
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