7,168 research outputs found

    "Tim Andrews: Glancing Back in the Mirror" Exhibition Brochure

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    This brochure was scanned in the VRC during summer 2014. The original may be viewed in the College Archives.This is a digital copy of the exhibition brochure for an exhibition titled Tim Andrews: Glancing Back in the Mirror. It was exhibited in the Rhodes College Clough-Hanson Gallery November 22,1997 - January 30,1998. David McCarthy wrote a short article that appears in the brochure. The brochure also contains Tim Andrews's resume

    "Tim Andrews: Glancing Back in the Mirror" Installation Images

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    These slides were scanned in the VRC during summer 2014. The originals may be viewed in the College Archives.Sixteen images documenting the installation of Tim Andrews: Glancing Back in the Mirror. This Clough-Hanson Gallery exhibition dates from November 22,1997 - January 30,1998

    Do dolphins benefit from nonlinear mathematics when processing their sonar returns?

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    An interview with author Tim Leighton about the paper

    Tim Di Muzio on 'Sabotage'

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    In a series of essays published in 2013 and 2014 on capitaspower.com, political economist Tim Di Muzio explored the concept of ‘sabotage’ as it applies to capitalist power. I recently rediscovered these essays and was so impressed by them that I have reposted them here as a single piece. About the author: Tim Di Muzio is a researcher at the University of Wollongong. He is the author of numerous books, including Debt as power, Carbon capitalism, and The 1% and the Rest of us

    1996-1997 Tim Gautreaux

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    Tim Gautreaux is the author of three novels and two earlier short story collections. His work has appeared in The New Yorker, The Best American Short Stories, The Atlantic, Harper’s, and GQ. After teaching for thirty years at Southeastern Louisiana University, he now lives, with his wife, in Chattanooga, Tennessee. (Photo credit: Randy Bergeron)https://egrove.olemiss.edu/grisham_res/1023/thumbnail.jp

    Making Connections - Notions of Beauty

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    The exhibition, Making Connection – Notions of Beauty, marked the opening of the BR Gallery at the Dali Intangible Cultural Heritage Station, in Yunnan province, China in October 2019, and coincided with the ‘Dialogue’ symposium funded by China’s National Art Fund. The exhibition and symposium was attended by government ministers, craft-makers, museum curators and academics from across China. Curated by Maria Hanson it brought together a group of seven internationally recognised artists from the United Kingdom working at the forefront of metalwork and jewellery, exploring diversity and connectivity within design, creative making practices and craftsmanship. This exhibition provided the platform to explore and discuss craft making within the contexts of Chinese and British cultures, allowing Hanson to expand on the series of presentations delivered at the 2018 Art Talent Training project: (Yunnan traditional metal technology and innovation) hosted by Yunnan Arts University in Kunming. Within hand crafted objects many elements of craft making processes are implicit. In China, this is often described through the use of the term ‘Intangible Cultural Heritage’, whereas in the UK the term ‘Tacit Knowledge’ is commonly used. In ‘The Tacit Dimension’, Michael Polanyi states “I shall reconsider human knowledge by starting from the fact that we can know more than we can tell.” (Polanyi 1966) This exhibition and the ‘Dialogue’ symposium focused on exploring ways to articulate what craft-made objects embody, in order to reveal the complexity of thought and action beyond a simplistic material and process description. Hanson’s Keynote presentation, situated the discussion within Tim Ingold’s proposition that “To know things you have to grow into them, and let them grow in you, so that they become part of who you are.” (Ingold 2013) She discussed how this sense of knowing can only come through experience and time doing, and the importance of critical thinking and reflection through making. This was illustrated with her own artefacts shown in the exhibition which explore material values and consumption, and how through the application of fine craft skills the intrinsic qualities of reclaimed materials can be elevated to re-present notions of beauty

    First person - Tim Petzold

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    First Person is a series of interviews with the first authors of a selection of papers published in Biology Open, helping researchers promote themselves alongside their papers. Tim Petzold is first author on ‘ Connexin 41.8 governs timely haematopoietic stem and progenitor cell specification’, published in BiO. Tim conducted the research described in this article while a PhD student in Julien Bertrand's lab at the Department of Pathology and Immunology, Faculty of Medicine, University of Geneva, Switzerland. He is now a postdoc in the lab of Holger Gerhardt at the Max Delbrück Center for Molecular Medicine in the Helmholtz Association, Berlin, Germany, investigating developmental biology – previously his focus was on how blood stem cells develop and now it has shifted to how the vascular system develops

    Tim Seibles, 40th Annual ODU Literary Festival

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    Tim Seibles is the author of several poetry collections including Hurdy-Gurdy, Hammerlock, Buffalo Head Solos, and Fast Animal, which was a finalist for the 2012 National Book Award. In 2013 he received both the Pen Oakland Josephine Miles Award for poetry and an honorary Doctorate of Humane Letters from Misericordia University for his literary accomplishments. His latest collection, One Turn Around the Sun, has just been released. Tim is the current Poet Laureate of Virginia and is a Professor of English at Old Dominion University where he teaches literature as well as classes in the MFA in writing program

    Tim Seibles, 39th Annual ODU Literary Festival

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    Tim Seibles is the author of several poetry collections including Hurdy-Gurdy, Hammerlock, Buffalo Head Solos, and Fast Animal, which was a finalist for the 2012 National Book Award. In 2013 he received both the Pen Oakland Josephine Miles Award for poetry and an honorary Doctorate of Humane Letters from Misericordia University for his literary accomplishments. His latest collection, One Turn Around the Sun, has just been released. Tim is the current Poet Laureate of Virginia and is a Professor of English at Old Dominion University where he teaches literature as well as classes in the MFA in writing program
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