8,787 research outputs found
Prediction of Neonatal Respiratory Distress Biomarker Concentration by Application of Machine Learning to Mid Infrared Spectra
Dataset to support article by Ahmed, W.; Veluthandath, A.V.; Rowe, D.J.; Madsen, J.; Clark, H.W.; Postle, A.D.; Wilkinson, J.S.; Murugan, G.S. Prediction of Neonatal Respiratory Distress Biomarker Concentration by Application of Machine Learning to Mid-Infrared Spectra. In "Sensors" 2022, 22, 1744.</span
Anthony Whitley, Spring 1992 ROTC Awards Day
ROTC Spring Awards Day was held in Rowe Hall at Jacksonville State University. Shown Anthony Whitley receives the Scabbard and Blade Award.https://digitalcommons.jsu.edu/rotc_photos/3224/thumbnail.jp
Interview with Anthony F. Janson
Anthony F. Janson is a retired professor and former Department Chair for the UNCW Department of Art and Theatre [retired December 2002]. This interview covers his complete life and career. He discusses his relationship with his art historian father, H.W. Janson, including his relationship as son and co-author and editor of the Janson texts on art history. The interview covers Tony's career as a scholar, book editor, author, art museum curator [at Indianapolis Art Museum and North Carolina Art Museum], and as a professor. Throughout, he comments on important artists in history and his philosophy of art history. He also includes stories of his time in the Vietnam War
Interview with Anthony F. Janson
Anthony F. Janson is a retired professor and former Department Chair for the UNCW Department of Art and Theatre [retired December 2002]. This interview covers his complete life and career. He discusses his relationship with his art historian father, H.W. Janson, including his relationship as son and co-author and editor of the Janson texts on art history. The interview covers Tony's career as a scholar, book editor, author, art museum curator [at Indianapolis Art Museum and North Carolina Art Museum], and as a professor. Throughout, he comments on important artists in history and his philosophy of art history. He also includes stories of his time in the Vietnam War
"Reckoning with Colin Rowe: ten architects take position"
Reckoning With Colin Rowe es un pequeño, pero muy inteligente y desinhibido, libro sobre Colin Rowe, publicado después de su fallecimiento y editado por el arquitecto, escritor y profesor Emmanuel Petit. En él se recogen una selección de textos realizados ex profeso por los siguientes autores: Robert Maxwell, Anthony Vidler, Peter Eisenman, O. Mathias Ungers, Léon Krier, Rem Koolhaas, Alan Colquhoun, Bernhard Hoesli, Bernard Tschumi y Robert Slutzky. Todos arquitectos, a excepción del último que es pintor. Autores muy variados, de diversas generaciones y de muy distinta procedencia que mantuvieron cierta relación con Rowe, que escriben desde un breve texto hasta los más amplios y abarcadores, combinando la forma del ensayo con la entrevista, con el propósito de valorar su legado. Palabras clave: Manierismo, Contra el Zeitgeist, Trasparencia, Collage, Montaje Reckoning With Colin Rowe is a small, but very intelligent and uninhibited, book about Colin Rowe, published after his death and edited by architect, writer and teacher, Emmanuel Petit. The book collects a selection of articles, written specificically for this issue by the following authors: Robert Maxwell, Anthony Vidler, Peter Eisenman, O. Mathias Ungers, Léon Krier, Rem Koolhaas, Alan Colquhoun, Bernhard Hoesli, Bernad Tschumi and Robert Slutzky, all of them architects, with the exception of the last one, who is a painter. All very different authors, from different generations and from very different backgrounds, that maintained a certain relationship with Rowe. They have written texts that vary from essay to interview and from short to more extensive and comprehensive texts, in order to asses his legacy. Keywords: Mannerism, Opposing Zeitgeist, Trasparency, Collage Montage</jats:p
Colin Rowe: Space as well-composed illusion
Architectural historian Colin Rowe, although well known for his intriguing analytical writings on modern architecture, rarely examined architectural space as a scholarly subject-matter. Historians examining Rowe’s writings rarely refer to the issue of space, either. Anthony Vidler, Werner Oechslin, Alexander Caragonne and others have examined Rowe’s investigations into urban space, his analyses of formal principles in architecture, or his critical stance towards the myths of modernism, but have not singled out architectural space as subject matter. Nevertheless, this paper argues that Rowe is indeed one of the few post-war historians writing in the English language to have conveyed analyses of architectural space, particularly in the volume The Mathematics of the Ideal Villa (1976). The paper examines how Rowe understood architectural space as relevant only when not seen as ‘pure’ but ‘contaminated’ with ambiguity and active character: notions of flatness versus depth and horizontal versus vertical, as well as the overlapping of conflicting scales or whole structural or spatial systems are central for Rowe’s reading of architectural space, which is also always infused with an idea of movement. Further, the paper traces influences of Rowe’s approach beyond the obvious influence by Rudolf Wittkower to Heinrich Wölfflin’s style and method, partially conveyed through the translation of Sigfried Giedion’s writings
Letter from Anthony Brummelkamp to Mrs. G. Groen van Prinsterer
In a letter to Mrs. G. Groen van Prinsterer from Rev. Anthony Brummelkamp, the author is clearing up some statements of Rev. Budding and chiding Rev. Hendrik Scholte for having an arrogant and sharp tone. A foonote to the letter mentions the school operated by Rev. Brummelkamp and Rev. Albertus C. Van Raalte in Arnhem.https://digitalcommons.hope.edu/vrp_1840s/1193/thumbnail.jp
Fr. Anthony J. Gittins, C.S.Sp.
Fr. Anthony J. Gittins, C.S.Sp. [b. 1943] was ordained in 1967. He attended the University of Edinburgh from 1968-72 and received a doctorate in Social Anthropology in 1977. Fr. Gittins was a missionary to the Mende people in Sierra Leone from 1972-80. He went on to serve as a professor at the Missionary Institute and as Formation Director in London from 1980-84. He is the Emeritus Professor of Theology and Culture at the Catholic Theological Union in Chicago, Illinois, where he began teaching in 1984. Fr. Gittins has spent over thirty years ministering to homeless women and those leaving prostitution in Chicago, and is the author of several books.https://dsc.duq.edu/sohp/1000/thumbnail.jp
Anthony Grooms, 21st Annual ODU Literary Festival
Anthony Grooms is the author of Ice Poems (Poetry Atlanta Press) and Trouble No More: Stories (LaQuesta Press). Shorter works have appeared in Callaloo, African American Review, and other journals. He has received awards from the City of Atlanta, the State of Georgia, Breadloaf Writers Workshop and the National Endowment for the Arts. In 1996, Trouble No More won the Lillian Smith Award from the Southern Regional Council. Novelist Marita Golden noted that “Grooms writes about the South, civil rights, home folks, black and white people and anything he wants to with more love, humor and finely-honed skill than I have seen in a long time.” The Atlanta Journal-Constitution said, “Groom’s stories take us to the center of the phenomenon (civil rights movement) with an honesty and courage long overdue.” Grooms is an Associate Professor of Creative Writing at Kennesaw State University in Georgia
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