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Word: artistics (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
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...experience of imagining music is much the same as listening to it. Also, that the corpus callosum, the mass of nerve fibers that wire the two hemispheres of the brain together, is enlarged in professional musicians. "Anatomists today would be hard put to identify the brain of a visual artist, a writer or a mathematician," Sacks writes, "but they could recognize the brain of a professional musician without a moment's hesitation." Yet he worries that by reducing music to a set of neurological functions, "the simple art of observation may be lost ... clinical description may become perfunctory...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Musicophilia: Song of Myself | 11/7/2007 | See Source »

...were a dancer for a while. Now you weave, keep journals, make pinch pots from clay...What made you want to be an artist...

Author: By Xiaofei Chen, CONTRIBUTING WRITER | Title: 15 Questions With Paulus Berensohn | 11/7/2007 | See Source »

...always wanted to be an artist, to make things. I am very dyslexic and wasn’t a good student in school, so I would doodle while the teacher gave arithmetic assignments. I would put 2 and 2 equals 8 and doodle all around...

Author: By Xiaofei Chen, CONTRIBUTING WRITER | Title: 15 Questions With Paulus Berensohn | 11/7/2007 | See Source »

...Streitenfeld, who worked with Scott on “Gladiator” and “Black Hawk Down,” provides a powerful yet non-distracting score, but music supervisor Kathy Nelson does an impressive job of incorporating old school-soul ballads from the likes of platinum artist Anthony Hamilton with classic jams that reflect the decade. The music helps lift the movie from a simple “based-on-a-true-story” flick to a film wrought with a sense of empowerment and empathy despite the harsh implications of the plot...

Author: By Erin A. May, CRIMSON STAFF WRITER | Title: American Gangster | 11/2/2007 | See Source »

...actively engage with the poem and consider the context out of which it grows. This fragmentation combines with Valentine’s use of internal monologue to lend the collection a dream-like tone. In these fragmented dreams, the disturbing becomes beautiful. In “The Artist in Prison,” Valentine delicately describes a prisoner with a life sentence, trading simple things such as cigarettes “for socks / for their threads...to embroider little / pictures” for someone else. This single action simply reveals the beauty of life. Even in oppressive, seemingly eternal captivity...

Author: By Erinn V. Westbrook, CONTRIBUTING WRITER | Title: ‘Little Boat’ Sails Smoothly Over Rough Waters | 11/2/2007 | See Source »

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