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...talkative of the pair, is quick to explain that the fragrance was not an attempt to go head to head with J. Lo. They just wanted to make a theoretical point. "We very strongly insist on architecture's potential to reach all the senses," he says, "not just the visual. At a time of digital media and cyberspace, architecture has this old-fashioned potential. You can touch it, you can feel it, you can see it, you can smell...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Architecture: The Box of Shadows | 11/6/2005 | See Source »

...musical Chicago, has made this fairy tale into an emotionally sumptuous love story. This intimate epic spans almost two decades, but its script, by Robin Swicord and Doug Wright, never hurries past the telling biographical detail of its four main characters. Nor does the movie's visual splendor ever obscure the furtive, assertive heart beating under the kimono. It's still early in the season of Oscar contenders, but Geisha has a shot to join Chicago as a Best Picture champ...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: The Making of a Geisha | 11/6/2005 | See Source »

...those who read Clowes' Ice Haven and found the constantly shifting visual styles a distraction, Tricked will be much easier to enjoy. Drawn with pen and ink in an unpretentious style, the artwork mediates nicely, if unspectacularly, between realism and caricature. What it lacks in experimentation it makes up for in clarity. Robinson keeps the layouts interestingly varied but always readable, and even occasionally does some stretching with scenes like the swirling panels of characters and events that culminate the climactic chapter. In another nice graphical touch, the lettering accompanying Steve's story becomes increasingly unsteady as he descends into...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: A Tapestry of Modern Living | 11/4/2005 | See Source »

...years have progressed, I have found myself taking an increasing number of visual and environmental studies (VES) courses, primarily because I realized that it made me uncomfortable to accept or reject certain works of art without ever attempting to create it myself. What I discovered is that the VES courses that I have taken have been some of the most rewarding academic and personal experiences in my Harvard career. It is very surprising to me, then, when those who have never remotely been involved with the VES department—or art whatsoever, for that matter?...

Author: By Thea S. Morton | Title: In Defense of Art | 11/4/2005 | See Source »

Such opinions don’t stray too far from historical debates over the purpose of art. It wasn’t too long ago that some philosophers, such as Georg Hegel, deemed the sole function of art as a way to convey the Spirit of God in visual terms. Its ultimate purpose, in his opinion, was to disappear entirely once mortals were enlightened with the Spirit. Plato himself believed in the eternal existence within the subjects of a work as an imitation of a phenomenal world...

Author: By Thea S. Morton | Title: In Defense of Art | 11/4/2005 | See Source »

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