Word: visionã
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...Harvard contributed what it could to the growing number of issues that were being developed for the overall community vision??it did not dominate it,” said the long-time Allston resident. “Harvard did not set out to create the thing the way they wanted...
...characters, “The Secret Lives of Umbrellas” made it impossible to empathize with the characters of the play. Effectively, it condemned itself to frivolity. This fact was not exactly a defect—it seemed to be a fundamental characteristic of Benjamin’s vision??but she has still curiously prevented her work from attaining a sense of depth...
...running from Oct. 12 to Dec. 31 at MIT. According to the exhibition’s brochure, the artists featured seek to evaluate whether “technological advances in digital smell, haptic technologies, and embodied computing” will be able to replace “vision??s long held-dominance over the other senses.” Tolaas’s exhibition explores how the body uses varying physiological states to communicate different moods—focusing on body odor elicited by fear. According to Vadim Bolshakov, an associate professor of psychiatry at Harvard Medical School...
...coherence of, say, a retrospective of a single designer. The point of the exhibit may be to comment on the state of high fashion today, but that point is too broad, and certainly cannot be contained in an exhibit with only ten designers.The exhibit needs a stronger sense of vision??a problem that would be helped, though not entirely solved, by showcasing only haute couture. If you don’t want to think about it too hard, though, the exhibit is nothing if not a pure pleasure for the simple beauty of the clothes...
...Scratch-N-Sniff inspired walls, a “touch-tunnel” filled with darkness, sounds, and a strobe light, and Bruce Nauman’s attempts to “see the night” help to propel the viewer through a tumultuous journey that challenges vision??s dominance of vision over the other senses. M.I.T.’s effort achieves something rare—a contemporary art exhibition that is both accessible and meaningful.“Sensorium” is presented in two parts. Part 1, on display in MIT?...