Word: screens
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: all
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
...They made me uncomfortable for two reasons. First, knowing the physical intimacy the couple shared was one that The Girl shared with different men every night. Second, while the more ‘feminine’ of the two actresses’ bodies was fully exposed on screen, the other’s was always covered by a conveniently placed bed linen.” Alford found the age difference between the stars of the film and the audience of blue-jean wearing, shorthaired women interesting. “Where are all the lesbians under...
...says Bastian. And a nest is exactly what the project will look like. A series of nylon ropes will be suspended from a bolt in the roof of the Holyoke Center, and from these ropes, a bed or “nest” of woven screen and rope will be hung. This nest will contain large-scale models of objects found in homes, such as watches, keys, a phone and a chair, that will cast shadows on the ground below. “Imagine what would happen if a giant bird went through Harvard Square and gathered up things...
...majority of the objects are made from styrofoam, most of which has been found as post-consumer waste. The Adams House squash courts are now littered with sheets upon sheets and blocks of styrofoam as well as colorful pool noodles, not to mention a profusion of rope, screen and aerosol cans of paint and glue. “I call it slightly controlled anarchy,” Bastian says...
...most colleges, as you enter an undergraduate dormitory, you walk down a hallway full of open doors. In the afternoon, students congregate in rooms on each side, chatting, doing homework in groups, watching movies. Spare time is spent socially, interacting with friends rather than with a computer screen...
...exoticism, "Stripburger" originates in Slovenia and the contributing artists form a mini-Balkans with representatives from Slovenia, Bosnia, Serbia, Italy, France and England. (All the works are in English.) Not surprisingly the comix themselves are as unconventional as their package. One book has been designed to look like screen shots of a lost Atari 2600 video game about a prince and an onion-soup-loving demon. Andrej Stular's "Hole" has a single panel per page - an inky, scratchy image of urban grief accompanied by a word or phrase that may or may not connect to the next page. Most...