111 research outputs found
Art in Situ: Exploring Art in Public Places
Thesis (Master's)--University of Washington, 2023The Washington State Art Collection’s Art in Public Places program (AIPP) acquires and cares for artworks throughout state buildings, colleges, universities, and schools where people study, work, and live. UW Seattle is home to 135 artworks in 39 locations. Art in Situ: Exploring Art in Public Places is a holistic document that not only serves as an educational tool also but as a guide to designing more tools related to educating, engaging, and experiencing public art. The deliverables seek to not only educate the public about the public art on UW Seattle's campus but also offer some insight into the commission, acquisition and selection of artworks, artists, and buildings. The final deliverables are divided into two main components; an interpretation guide, and a public programming toolkit. Understanding Art in Public Places, an Interpretation Guide contains 26 artwork sets that include context about the artwork, the artist's general practice, information about the location, and keywords related to the artwork's themes. Experiencing Art in Public Place, a Programming Toolkit contains a list of things to consider when creating public programs for young cosmopolitans, examples of programs, a framework for new programs, and evaluation instrument. The programs developed for this project seek to engage a specific audience with connections to the campus. Through the combination of all the components of this project, the public will have ample tools to explore and connect with the Art in Public Places program. The deliverables are informed by research about understanding contemporary public space, the bonds between these spaces and audiences, and the importance of context. The interpretive content was collected from ArtsWa's database, records, and selection paperwork as well as independent research
Art in Situ: Exploring Art in Public Places
Thesis (Master's)--University of Washington, 2023The Washington State Art Collection’s Art in Public Places program (AIPP) acquires and cares for artworks throughout state buildings, colleges, universities, and schools where people study, work, and live. UW Seattle is home to 135 artworks in 39 locations. Art in Situ: Exploring Art in Public Places is a holistic document that not only serves as an educational tool also but as a guide to designing more tools related to educating, engaging, and experiencing public art. The deliverables seek to not only educate the public about the public art on UW Seattle's campus but also offer some insight into the commission, acquisition and selection of artworks, artists, and buildings. The final deliverables are divided into two main components; an interpretation guide, and a public programming toolkit. Understanding Art in Public Places, an Interpretation Guide contains 26 artwork sets that include context about the artwork, the artist's general practice, information about the location, and keywords related to the artwork's themes. Experiencing Art in Public Place, a Programming Toolkit contains a list of things to consider when creating public programs for young cosmopolitans, examples of programs, a framework for new programs, and evaluation instrument. The programs developed for this project seek to engage a specific audience with connections to the campus. Through the combination of all the components of this project, the public will have ample tools to explore and connect with the Art in Public Places program. The deliverables are informed by research about understanding contemporary public space, the bonds between these spaces and audiences, and the importance of context. The interpretive content was collected from ArtsWa's database, records, and selection paperwork as well as independent research
Derivatives combining the fragment of pyrazinamide and 4-aminosalicylic acid as antimycobacterial compounds
Charles University Faculty of Pharmacy in Hradec Králové Department of Pharmaceutical chemistry and Pharmaceutical analysis Author: Petr Šlechta Supervisor: doc. PharmDr. Jan Zitko, Ph.D. Consultant: MSc. Ghada Basem Bouz, Ph.D. Title of diploma thesis: Derivatives combining the fragment of pyrazinamide and 4-aminosalicylic acid as antimycobacterial compounds According to WHO, tuberculosis (TB) is the leading cause of death from a single infectious organism worldwide and the number of cases with drug resistant TB is still increasing, creating the need for new antituberculotics. Therefore, we report design, synthesis and antimicrobial evaluation of a series of hybrid compounds combining different pyrazinamide derivates and p- aminosalicylic acid as potential antituberculotic agents. The compounds were prepared by mixing different pyrazinecarboxylic acids, after activation by 1,1'-carbonyldiimidazole, with p- aminosalicylic acid in dimethylsulfoxide as a solvent. Obtained compounds were in vitro tested for their antimycobacterial activity against M. tuberculosis H37Rv, M. tuberculosis H37Ra and four other mycobacterial strains. Prepared compounds were also in vitro screened for antibacterial, antifungal, and cytotoxic (HepG2) activity. Most compounds showed antimycobacterial activity in range of..
The Arab Intellectual as a Woman: The Writings of Ghada Samman
Ghada Samman (b. 1942) is a prominent literary figure with an established legacy across the Arabic-speaking world. Through her widely-acclaimed writings, the Syrian author, journalist, and critic occupies a unique position in Arab intellectual circles as a woman who combines a commitment to the peoples’ causes with an innovative literary style vividly capturing the estrangement faced by the modern Arab subject. Samman has spent her life in exile, first in Beirut and eventually settling in Paris when the Lebanese Civil War (1975-1990) escalated. She has published 10 poetry books, 6 short story collections, 5 novels, and 20 collections of essays. However, despite her influential writings, Samman is relatively unknown outside of the Arabic-speaking world and a negligible portion of her corpus has been translated into English. My presentation posits the reason for this exclusion being that the Anglophone world does not know where to place Samman as she refuses the mould of “women’s writing” to which the Western academy is accustomed. Hers is the broad, interdisciplinary concern of the intellectual, writing on themes of exile, diatribes against capitalism and classism, the liberation of sexuality from prescribed norms, as well as how patriarchal hegemonies victimise both men and women. Even in the Arabic-speaking world she has pushed back against reductive labelling of her work, writing in a 1987 article: ‘My allegiance is to my freedom and my faith in a woman’s ability to write great human literature. There’s no need to call it “feminist” when its defence of women is part and parcel of its defence of all who are oppressed in Arab societies.’ My presentation will explore the life and work of Ghada Samman from the position of an Arab intellectual rather than a limited (and expected) reading of her as a woman writer exclusively concerned with “women’s issues”
Ladder Bottom-up Convolutional Bidirectional Variational Autoencoder for Image Translation of Dotted Arabic Expiration Dates
This paper proposes an approach of Ladder Bottom-up Convolutional Bidirectional Variational Autoencoder (LCBVAE) architecture for the encoder and decoder, which is trained on the image translation of the dotted Arabic expiration dates by reconstructing the Arabic dotted expiration dates into filled-in expiration dates. We employed a customized and adapted version of Convolutional Recurrent Neural Network CRNN model to meet our specific requirements and enhance its performance in our context, and then trained the custom CRNN model with the filled-in images from the year of 2019 to 2027 to extract the expiration dates and assess the model performance of LCBVAE on the expiration date recognition. The pipeline of (LCBVAE+CRNN) can be then integrated into an automated sorting systems for extracting the expiry dates and sorting the products accordingly during the manufacture stage. Additionally, it can overcome the manual entry of expiration dates that can be time-consuming and inefficient at the merchants. Due to the lack of the availability of the dotted Arabic expiration date images, we created an Arabic dot-matrix True Type Font (TTF) for the generation of the synthetic images. We trained the model with unrealistic synthetic dates of 60,000 images and performed the testing on a realistic synthetic date of 3000 images from the year of 2019 to 2027, represented as yyyy/mm/dd. In our study, we demonstrated the significance of latent bottleneck layer with improving the generalization when the size is increased up to 1024 in downstream transfer learning tasks as for image translation. The proposed approach achieved an accuracy of 97% on the image translation with using the LCBVAE architecture that can be generalized for any downstream learning tasks as for image translation and reconstruction.* Corresponding author E-mail address: ghadasoliman@orangecom Received: 14 April 2024; Accepted: 28 August 2024; Published: 30 September 202
Ġāda as-Sammān fī riḥlātihā aw kayfa yuṣbiḥu al-ǧasad ḥaqībat safar
In a book entitled "The Body is a Suitcase" Ghada as-Samman publishes narratives from places visited by her in the years 1964-1976. In the form of essays and reportages she describes European and Arab cities, including many capitals. These materials that resulted finally in the abovementioned 520-page book had been earlier published separately in two Lebanese journals and one of them also in a Kuwaiti journal. In her works as-Samman do not focuses on descriptions of visited places but she shows noteworthy and often surprising phenomena or cases that should be interesting for the curious Arab reader. She picks untypical traditions and titbits referring to the daily life of the European societies and correlates them with Arabian traditions. The aim of this paper is to analyse the concept of journey in terms of Ghada as-Samman works and destabilisation as a consequence of the journey. Ghada as-Samman herself declares that destabilisation instigates the people to think. Therefore, during her journey she contemplates many important issues relevant to the cultural and political life of Arabs. Language used by the author is very colourful so in this paper it also forms an area of investigation. It is worth noticing that sometimes as-Samman’s works are full of metaphors and beautiful expressions adeptly and tastefully used by the author. On the other hand, some of her essays are written in simple language and can be understood directly – the conclusion is that Ghada Samman’s main goal was to make her works get to the broadest audience possible
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Middle Eastern Studies Newsletter 2010-2011, No. 34
New Ancient Israel and the Near East program; interview with Ghada Abdel Aal, author of I Want to Get Married! The Jil Jadid graduate student conference in Arabic literature and linguistics; a visit by Adonis; Arabic House co-op; Intensive Persian language summer institute; teacher study abroad; outreach lecture series; the new push for Turkish studies.Middle Eastern Studie
Remote sensing-based automatic detection of shoreline position: A case study in apulia region
Remote sensing and satellite imagery have become commonplace in efforts to monitor and model various biological and physical characteristics of the Earth. The land/water interface is a continually evolving landscape of high scientific and societal interest, making the mapping and monitoring thereof particularly important. This paper aims at describing a new automated method of shoreline position detection through the utilization of Synthetic Aperture Radar (SAR) images derived from European Space Agency satellites, specifically the operational SENTINEL Series. The resultant delineated shorelines are validated against those derived from video monitoring systems and in situ monitoring; a mean distance of 1 and a maximum of 3.5 pixels is found.</p
Palestine in London: Palestinian and Jewish Lifeworlds after the Foundation of the State of Israel
The article is based on Ghada Karmi’s autobiography published in 2002 and deals with the problem of forced migration and the establishment of a new life and a new identity in London. Expelled with her family from Jerusalem in 1948, Ghada describes her desire and attempts to become integrated in British society. Confronted with racism directed at the new wave of immigrants in the 1960’s, her newly-developed British identity was questioned from outside while her Palestinian identity was weakened and the Arab culture conveyed by her parents had no real meaning for her generation. The author argues that it was precisely this problem of living in a Zwischenwelt (intermediate world) that made Ghada’s generation receptive to political ideologies imported from the Middle East, such as the Panarabism of Nasser or a secular Palestinian identity symbolised by Arafat.The article is based on Ghada Karmi’s autobiography published in 2002 and deals with the problem of forced migration and the establishment of a new life and a new identity in London. Expelled with her family from Jerusalem in 1948, Ghada describes her desire and attempts to become integrated in British society. Confronted with racism directed at the new wave of immigrants in the 1960’s, her newly-developed British identity was questioned from outside while her Palestinian identity was weakened and the Arab culture conveyed by her parents had no real meaning for her generation. The author argues that it was precisely this problem of living in a Zwischenwelt (intermediate world) that made Ghada’s generation receptive to political ideologies imported from the Middle East, such as the Panarabism of Nasser or a secular Palestinian identity symbolised by Arafat
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ShelfLife@Texas October 2010 Blog Archive
CONTENTS: Booking it This Weekend -- Faculty Book Celebration Honors L. Michael White’s “Scripting Jesus” -- Winners of the Fourteenth Annual Hamilton Book Awards Sponsored by the University Co-operative Society -- Playwright-in-Residence’s Work Featured -- Author Ghada Abdel Aal Discusses Best-Selling Book “I Want to Get Married!” || WORKS MENTIONED IN CONTENTS: “Scripting Jesus: The Gospels in Rewrite” by L. Michael White -- “Exiles at Home: The Struggle to Become American in Creole New Orleans” by Shirley E. Thompson -- “Making the Scene: A History of Stage Design and Technology in Europe and the United States” by Oscar G. Brockett -- “Village China under Socialism and Reform: A Micro-History, 1948-2008” by Huaiyin Li -- “Music in the Hispanic Caribbean” by Robin D. Moore -- “Chicano Students and the Courts: The Mexican American Legal Struggle for Educational Equality” by Richard R. Valencia -- "The Happy Ones" by Julie Marie Myatt -- "I Want to Get Married!" by Ghada Abdel AalDivision of Campus and Community Engagemen
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