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Word: imagesã (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
Dates: during 2002-2002
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Usage:

...play is framed by Daniel’s narratives, as he “rides the waves” of his memories of his grandmother’s final days. Kastleman says her experimentation with memory and the “selective images?? it creates is most apparent in the play’s set design. The umbrellas onstage that “serve to delineate an abstract, surreal and hopefully beautiful space,” are the most prominent feature of the “semi-abstracted?...

Author: By Michelle Chun, CRIMSON STAFF WRITER | Title: Persistence of Memory | 12/5/2002 | See Source »

...best-seller For Common Things: Irony, Trust, and Commitment in America Today and an upcoming book on globalization. I wish I understood film. I didn’t learn anything about movies in college except a few trips to the Brattle. This whole vocabulary of sounds and images??all I can do with it is feel my way around it blindly. It’s really important for understanding what goes on not only in entertainment but also for film as a modern literature. I really regret that I didn’t learn a non-Western language...

Author: By FM Staff, CRIMSON STAFF WRITERS | Title: What Harvard Doesn't Know | 9/26/2002 | See Source »

...first group of images??which is also his oldest work—describes Bochner’s investigation of block structures constructed from a systematic arrangement of two-inch cubes. Grid-like and highly organized in both presentation and content, the photographs depict the formation of these assembled cubic modules and their dependence on a mathematically predetermined model. Schematic diagrams that are evidence of the work’s interest in seriality are shown in conjunction with several views of the block structures. As Bochner stated, this series is principally about the process rather than the object. Attempting...

Author: By Sarah R. Lehrer-graiwer and Natalia H.J. Naish, CONTRIBUTING WRITERSS | Title: The Photographs of an Idea | 4/12/2002 | See Source »

...second level of art is the visionary. Visionary art draws on archetypes of the “collective unconscious,” creating a deeper work. Appearing in dreams, mythology and art, images??self-originating (epiphanic), inventive, spontaneous—can be viewed as metaphors and cannot be adequately circumscribed...

Author: By Stephanie Hatch, CONTRIBUTING WRITER | Title: Finley: Fondling The Artless | 2/15/2002 | See Source »

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