Word: visualizers
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: all
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
...heads the course. “I’d like to think I’m the reason,” he joked, attributing the large enrollment size to a limited selection of Literature and Arts Core classes and the “unusual” mix of visual material and history in his class. “Designing the American City” saw an undergraduate turnout of 313 the last time it was offered in Spring 2005. “The subject is worthy of broad discussion, and I am proud to be reaching a broad audience...
...Radcliffe Institute, it could be described as many things. An intellectual hot house, perhaps, where 50 scholars from all over the United States and other countries (selected from an applicant pool of close to 800) from disciplines ranging from electrical engineering, musicology, physics, visual arts, life sciences, literature, anthropology, chemistry, law, computer science, journalism, human rights, history, political science, mathematics, sociology, and medical science to art history study. At Radcliffe, fellows work on topics such as the “Development of Techniques to Identify the Signatures of Little Higgs Models at the Large Hadron Collider with the ATLAS Detector?...
...visiting lecturer this semester in the Visual and Environmental Studies department, Hoberman’s genre-jumping critical sensibility has informed nearly two decades of work as the head film critic for the storied alternative weekly...
...Doug Jones)—a child-eating monster with eye-sockets in his hands—and, most terrifying of all, a fascist, sadistic stepfather named Capitán Vidal (Sergi López). All aspects of production in this adult fable are expertly done, especially the visual and sound effects. Del Toro is one of three Mexican directors with Oscar-nominated films this year (the other two being Alejandro González Iñárritu with “Babel” and Alfonso Cuarón with “Children of Men?...
...psychedelically animated warp zone of fun. Dropping them off in a room filled with autumn foliage and motionless alter egos of the band members, the video reaches its logically illogical conclusion. At first annoying, then perhaps amusing, the video is ultimately pretty funny. The low-budget effects and cute visual jokes (like a carefully placed DFA Records moon flag) attest to the band’s self-parodying vibe. The song is rather silly, with lyrics that seem to be written by someone who’s taken a few too many moon rocks to the head...