Word: succeeded
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: all
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
...digestive process. Ironically, after 30 years of decomposition, the chocolate lion is more revolting than the bunny. Roth is poking fun at the heroism and self-aggrandizement that is often associated with sculpture. Beuys does not aim at permanence with his sculptures, but by attempting to defy time they succeed in accepting it and even reveling in it. Like human beings, his works fester and rot. Roth has no interest in being the glorious artist whose work is completed with the final stroke of the chisel. He encourages the changes that time inflicts as his work takes on a life...
...answer to that question isn’t entirely clear. Butt’s work shows thought and potential, but the works currently on view at Bernard Toale do not quite succeed in their announced mission...
...ways to alter the interpretation of Oleanna and its lead roles. A successful interpretation, though, must effectively depict the shifts in power that lie at the play’s center. An idea for reimagining a play can intrigue without working dramatically. Above all else, a play must succeed in creating conflict—and that is where this production is most lacking. The characters’ relationships lack the initial tension that the rest of the play needs to thrive. And without conflict, there is no drama...
...asked the panelists about the pressures facing men who want to take time off for their children, considering that those men may not be as well-positioned to succeed in their careers as some of their contemporaries...
...interview published Sunday by the New York Times, "I never saw a plan that was going to take him out. It was just some ideas coming from various quarters about, 'Let's go bomb.'" That strategy had failed in 1998, and there was no reason to believe it would succeed...