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278 Sentences With "affinities"

How to use affinities in a sentence? Find typical usage patterns (collocations)/phrases/context for "affinities" and check conjugation/comparative form for "affinities". Mastering all the usages of "affinities" from sentence examples published by news publications.

The "ad preferences" page sometimes assigns political affinities and "multicultural affinities" for users, meaning an assessment of the political or cultural groups that Facebook believes they engage with most frequently.
Yet there are affinities, as a successful British petition shows.
Everything is sleekly aligned according to formal similarities or conceptual affinities.
It is characteristic that such affinities rarely cohered into sustained commitments.
But Seattle has other affinities: for coffee, granola, and unusual seasonings.
Do you see this as stemming from ideological or tactical affinities?
Blacktop (1972), and harbors muted affinities with Jules Dassin's Thieves' Highway (1949).
Ms. Springs is a talented young vocalist and pianist with throwback affinities.
"Menashe" has affinities with Yiddish cinema of the 1930s in other ways.
But it is strengthened, as well, by the natural affinities between our societies.
He has certain affinities with, but no particular allegiance to, the jazz tradition.
The piece has Wagnerian affinities, with Rhinemaiden-like music in the early going.
But despite historical affinities, Christianity and technology are, in some ways, naturally at odds.
The affinities between the two worlds, separated by centuries, are at the play's heart.
Facebook lists the number of people who match those affinities within its ads tool.
Given human nature, the alliances and affinities are almost always short term, of course.
Affinities based on the clever algorithmic sorting of refracted desires are only weakly bound.
Such affinities can mute the radicalness of some works; others retain their streetwise beauty.
Elective Affinities particularly succeeds when materials in de Waal's works resonate with the permanent collection.
And the issue isn't a partisan one, no matter my own particular and vocal affinities.
Affinities between books — in voice or tone or a character — often lead to good matches.
Whatever affinities these characters have, they are practically obliterated as soon as they are established.
Rather than pointing to unexpected affinities, the juxtaposition shows how different these two painters are.
But while chatting about her interior design influences she has another realization about her affinities' origins.
In political psychology, there's this concept that Jon Jost, at New York University, calls elective affinities.
Austria would find itself closer in its affinities to Victor Orban's Hungary than to Merkel's Germany.
They found out quickly that their broad affinities resonated with an unnamed cross-section of listeners.
As human beings, regardless of our political preferences or religious affinities, we should not stand for it.
Given their affinities for unforgettable wars, theirs would almost certainly be a fight for the history books.
They were able to exclude black, Asian, and Latino "affinities" from seeing the ad, and published the results.
We can talk about the affinities his work had with the advanced and radical art of his peers.
Yet, as the curators note, the aspirations and affinities of these prints are most of all to painting.
But despite their school ties and other affinities, the president rarely followed one of his doctor's persistent prescriptions.
More than almost anyone, Zaha Hadid unmoored contemporary architecture from its affinities for right angles and male dominance.
Didn't Jeremy Corbyn, whose ideological affinities run in the same direction, just lead Britain's Labour Party to disaster?
The affinities are natural — the music is thick with references to American pop, hip-hop and R&B.
Detroit Affinities: Adriana Martínez continues on display at the Museum of Contemporary Art Detroit (MOCAD) through April 23.
The company said it would stop allowing advertisers to exclude certain "ethnic affinities" in categories like jobs and housing.
But even with these reference points, the album's jazz affinities feel less meaningful than its resonances with New Orleans.
The artists Alexander Calder and Ellsworth Kelly maintained an intimate, lively correspondence that reveals affinities both personal and aesthetic.
This weekend he explores his flamenco affinities, collaborating with dancers as well as the excellent Spanish guitarist Niño Josele.
In the late 1930s, breaking with Le Corbusier over her affinities with communism, Perriand emerged as an activist designer.
The original incarnation featured John Zorn and a number of other musicians whose affinities ran from punk to vaudeville.
Throughout his career, Baki has integrated expressionist and abstract affinities into his figurative scenes with a streetwise visual vocabulary.
The unexpected affinities proposed in this book bring to mind the roving approach of Marshall McLuhan or Bruno Latour.
On the other hand, what do we gain by ignoring these histories and apparent affinities, or their aesthetic value?
Gruen could not foresee how tax laws, cheap land, and American's affinities for their cars would corrupt his utopian cityscape.
Mr Trump will probably be an unabashed Pillar Three president, enraptured by the national interest and unmoved by transnational affinities.
This energetic band, led by the trumpeter and composer Gabriel Alegría, has made a mission out of highlighting those affinities.
President Trump can lean on ideological affinities with Orbán, who supported his campaign and shares his strident views on immigration.
Strong affinities between the Enlightenment and liberality have produced a commonplace that liberals are indifferent or even hostile toward religion.
She had a Symbolist bent, with affinities for Gauguin, Bonnard, Ensor, and Klimt, and inflections of Sergei Diaghilev's Ballets Russes.
It's in the artistic influences of Damien Hirst and H.R. Giger who have affinities for displays of the outer worldly.
Spanning five decades, the pieces highlight the aesthetic and personal affinities between these two heavyweights of 20th-century abstract art.
Here, progressives are supposed to be comfortable with the idea of hyphenated identities and overlapping ethnic, sexual and political affinities.
Perhaps, then, he is best compared to Robert Irwin, whose monumental constructions have some affinities with these relatively small sculptures.
Fans of Gardam's "Old Filth" trilogy will recognize the author's frank, funny dialogue and her affinities for her characters' perceptions.
Formal affinities dart back and forth across his production, such that intimate links are forged between works otherwise distanced by time.
Expect her to stress her affinities with President Barack Obama, who is very popular nationwide but especially popular with young people.
Critics and curators took note, recognizing affinities with the New Image style of visually arresting emblems superimposed on abstract, brushy grounds.
Yet the fact that Facebook's own platform natively badges users' political affinities frequently gets overlooked in the discussion around this issue.
If the exhibition is about connections and affinities – which I think it is – then Smith and Feeley are the starting points.
But for a few years, they can be a complete manifestation of their parents' affinities and have zero say in the matter.
Others who fall victim to work romances develop affinities for nurturing bosses and mentors in powerful positions, confusing admiration for a crush.
Given Kaine's experiences arguing civil rights cases and his work as a missionary in Honduras, the shift may have reflected personal affinities.
On Facebook's ad-buying website, however, advertisers can choose to include or exclude certain demographic "affinities" from ads in the United States.
While these affinities testify to Parajanov's centrality as a 21977th-century visual artist, "The Color of Pomegranates" is in no way derivative.
It involves an onscreen juxtaposition of the kind known as a match cut, where the cutting highlights affinities between two successive images.
Steven Spielberg, whose own movies share obvious affinities with those of Frank Capra and John Ford, is the surrogate for William Wyler.
It may be that the survival of many great things in New York will ultimately depend on the affinities of rich nostalgists.
Libertarians also tend to be big fans of modernity, and despite its affinities to the tech world, neoreaction really, really is not.
The 33rd São Paulo Biennial, Affective Affinities, at the Ciccillo Matarazzo Pavilion (Ibirapuera Park, Gate 3, São Paulo, Brazil) closes December 9.
Contrary to Israeli propaganda, which claims that the march is staged by Hamas, participation in the march transcended factional and ideological affinities.
I found these suggestions playing out in the 33rd São Paulo Art Biennial which opened on September 7 under the title Affective Affinities.
By grouping the books according, apparently, to aesthetic affinities rather than place or publisher, Brilliant heightens the sense of travel that characterizes them.
The company's algorithmic people profiling also extends to labelling users as having particular political views, and/or having racial and ethnic/multicultural affinities.
This energetic band, led by Mr. Alegría, a trumpeter and composer born in Lima, has made a mission out of highlighting those affinities.
The election was the first time Google allowed ads targeting political affinities, but it offered just two categories — left-leaning and right-leaning.
And it has grown out of the longtime affinities and links among recreational boaters in Puerto Rico and the islands to the east.
The choices we make every day about food selection, preparation, and consumption lie at the foundation of our identities and relationships and affinities.
But while perfumery and pastry-making may have some obvious affinities, coaxing retail to cohabit with a restaurant can prove a trickier proposition.
"Breitbart has elective affinities with the alt-right, and the alt-right has clearly influenced Breitbart," Spencer told the Daily Beast in August.
At first glance, they seemed to share formal affinities with classic East Asian ink-wash painting, but their mode of production was completely different.
Ariana and Hailey mirror one another, too, albeit less overtly: the effortless sun-kissed beauty, the fleeting acting careers, the affinities for bad boys.
Macron was in a runoff campaign against the extreme-right candidate, Marine Le Pen, who, like Trump, has numerous affinities to Putin and Russia.
Raised in Chile and based in New York, she began her career focused on standard jazz repertoire, but her affinities have always roved widely.
Merely reading the list of affinities shared by the two preschool B.F.F.s in Ines Rivera's poem seems a portent of their inevitable falling out.
That said, there are some real ideological affinities between Putin's Russia and the new, Trump-esque populist movements that have arisen on the European right.
The company defended the use of its so-called "ethic affinities" categories for ad targeting in a statement denouncing the anti-discrimination lawsuit it faced.
They are stuck in a trap: A symbol of their affinities, their memories, their home also happens to be a rancid icon of intolerance. 20.
The exhibition Elective Affinities draws viewers into stories of the Frick's permanent collection and a contemporary artist's intellectual and aesthetic reckonings and inventions with them.
Including so much information about the artist's thoughts and inspirations make Elective Affinities as much about the process of creating art as the final result.
Every aspect of cows pleased him: their "hull-down affinities" when grazing, their "curveting, fish-leaping" when made anxious, the "puffed felt" of their manure.
MBTM's four-week middle school program is aimed at giving male students a space to express the full range of desires, emotions, affinities, and interests.
One thread follows Tina as she helps the authorities catch the child pornographers, another shows Vore and Tina enthusiastically and sexually explicitly exploring their affinities.
Finally the polarization is electronic and digital, as Americans increasingly inhabit the filter bubbles of news and social media that correspond to their ideological affinities.
The exhibition enjoys an easy flow despite the bifurcated layout and a diverse range of approaches and materials, with underlying affinities animated by muted antagonisms.
LAURIE BERGMANWAYNE, PA. Dear Laurie, The interest gap between tweens and teenagers can be wide, but based on their tastes, your kids share reading affinities.
And given the closeness and long-standing historical and cultural affinities between Turkey and Azerbaijan this war would also raise the specter of Turkish involvement.
The movie has certain affinities with other recent critical favorites, but is less knotty than "Ex Machina" (2014) and less sentiment driven than "Her" (2013).
The origins of the AI world's overconfidence here lie not in any particular vendetta against radiologists, but in the structural affinities of artificial intelligence itself.
As sponges eat everything from bacteria to metazoan zooplankton that doesn't really help much to make this an exclusive statement of sponge affinities in deep time.
Andrew Kovacs, curator of Archive of Affinities, uses clippings and artifacts from his curio cabinet of built patrimony to create towers, hotels, and a dog park.
We say that the thing is "on brand" for a particular person — their personality and habits, their affinities for other series or films or fashion choices.
She and others see Water Art as a correlate of Land Art, and the movement has affinities with urban projects by Agnes Denes and Mary Miss.
All of this expansion will depend on emphasizing convenience, encouraging strong brand affinities, and creating consistency from clinic to clinic — you know, like SoulCycle and Drybar.
While certain Asian-American groups share conservative cultural affinities with the Republican Party, Asian-Americans are by and large supportive of the idea of big government.
No doubt they will give her a cautiously warm welcome (she has some affinities with Germany's chancellor, Angela Merkel, including an upbringing as a pastor's daughter).
That's obviously not because the speaker of the House and the famously tight-lipped former Fed chair have any affinities of political outlook or personal temperament.
Both artists explore the metaphysical and appropriate images from classical antiquity in vacant landscapes and lone portraits, demonstrating shared affinities across different mediums and time periods.
On Friday the group presents preludes and fugues from this collection at Carnegie Hall alongside works by Mendelssohn, Schumann and Sebastian Currier that have Bachian affinities.
The affinities in the lyrics include the songs of Lorenz Hart and Oscar Hammerstein II, and the musical styles of the period get a dutiful workout.
I was vividly reminded of this by Navid Kermani's Between Quran and Kafka: West-Eastern Affinities — the best new book of literary criticism I've read this year.
But there's more to the difference between true strongman coaches and mere college football coaches than those various impacted and infected affinities and the distortions they create.
His work has been overlooked since his 1996 death, only receiving recognition in 2018, including a solo presentation at the 33rd Bienal de São Paulo: Affective Affinities.
Andrej Babis, the acting prime minister, whose affinities lean more toward the West and NATO, said publicly that Mr. Nikulin should be sent to the United States.
But the more you learn about the brothers — and particularly about their Midwestern childhood — the more you sense affinities between them that wouldn't be obvious at first.
Exhibitions from Florida to Cleveland this winter are asking visitors to consider the affinities between sound and visual art — and the way we see (and hear) artwork.
And Ms. Ulrich's direction offers stealthy moments of recognition that suggest the universality of object affinities, as when Trish absent-mindedly begins stroking Erica's stuffed teddy bear.
That gives partisanship a more fluid nature than in the past and opens it to the formation of affinities grounded in personality, values, religion, and lifestyle choices.
They seem uncharacteristically subdued but remind us that a real sensitivity to materials and their affinities was as much a part of Voulkos's breakthroughas his performative flair.
There are clear affinities among George, Jahnn and Sun Ra; how does this juxtaposition impact the relationship between Sun Ra's Afrofuturism and the American Civil Rights movement?
Don't miss the formal qualities in Lambert's striations of color and the expressive line in Zemánková's abstractions, which share affinities with textbook modernism's celebration of pure form.
The bigger picture: A slew of companies are working to marry millennials' affinities for online video and shopping — and capitalize on their arrival as the most populous generation.
Still, if affinities become hurtful, a son going to his mother, in person, will almost always yield better results than a letter from a disgruntled daughter-in-law.
Some observers may find in Smith's handling of paint technical affinities with the bold, brushy strokes of such classic abstractionists as Franz Kline or the young Al Held.
While many liberals believe that minorities are immune to racist ideas and harbor affinities for other minority communities through some shared understanding, that is often not the case.
In spite of these issues, or perhaps because of them, K-pop and contemporary art have shared affinities and antagonisms that the show's curators take pains to explore.
It has affinities with "Romeo and Juliet," as well as "Tabu," the South Seas picture by the cinematic masters F. W. Murnau and Robert J. Flaherty in 1931.
In addition to his affinities for militaristic jumpsuits, developing nuclear weapons, and lying about his golf scores, the late North Korean dictator Kim Jong-il also loved pizza.
With a heavy, driving pulse and warm, arcing melodies, their music was distinctly South African, even as its swing rhythms and flittering improvisations reflected affinities with American jazz.
STEVE COLEMAN AND FIVE ELEMENTS "Harvesting Semblances and Affinities" (Pi Recordings, 2010) Mr. Coleman's classic brand of knotty experimentalism is built on a balance of exuberance and severity.
At the Stone next week, performing with a different project each night, he will have the chance to engage with something like the full breadth of his affinities.
But fluency is also a function of familiarity, as grammar offers few clues as to the parts of speech that are not so much idioms as loose affinities.
Between Quran and Kafka: West-Eastern Affinities by Navid Kermani, translated by Tony Crawford (2017), and published by Polity Press is available from Amazon and brick-and-mortar bookstores.
While Levant coaxes out formal affinities in her installations and collages, another commonality shared by her materials, and by extension her artworks, is their relationship with the human body.
Despite their cultural affinities, UAE officers must take care not to get on the wrong side of tribes for whom short-term alliances with jihadis are a survival tactic.
Film trailers based on audience members' preferences or affinities is also an area that Lu is working on, which she sees as directly relevant to her targeted clothing recommendations.
I do not believe these affinities have been previously explored, nor do I know of an instance where Hammons and Koons have been paired in a museum sanctioned exhibition.
If Art is Politics begins to chart the investigations and affinities proposed for the Vera List Center's distinct curricular investigations that will be developed throughout the next two years.
And the issue could have electoral repercussions as well, as Venezuelan-Americans in Florida represent a growing voting bloc, and share affinities with the state's large Cuban-American community.
In doing so, Meese forces a confrontation that draws out affinities, if not between the subjects themselves then between those aspects of their lives and personae that fascinate us.
Currently on view: William J. Glackens and Pierre-Auguste Renoir: Affinities and Distinctions, and Remember to React: 60 Years of Collecting, the first comprehensive installation of the museum's collection.
Critic's Pick Have you ever paused to consider the spiritual and physical affinities between the desolate universe of Samuel Beckett and the wacky world of vintage Warner Brothers cartoons?
The band, fronted for the most part by John McCauley — who maintains half-wasted bad-boy charisma throughout the movie's archival footage — has affinities with all of those groups.
English speakers are more hospitable to fiction in translation, and yet when was the last time you heard someone mention "Wilhelm Meister's Apprenticeship" or "Elective Affinities," Goethe's long fictions?
Even the phrase "elective affinities" is likely taken from the title of an 1809 novel by famed German writer Johann Wolfgang von Goethe, although its usage traces back earlier.
"Wax advocated an immigration policy that favors immigrants with cultural affinities to the U.S. She emphasized that the position she was defending 'doesn't rely on race at all,' " Hazony writes.
As might be expected, the nine works the artist has created for Elective Affinities similarly suggest conversations: between a collector and an artist, America and Europe, materials and their histories.
That implies that even if Instagram isn't reading our DMs per se, it's using our relationships and affinities to inform its suggestions algorithm — and ultimately increase engagement and ad dollars.
Still, the most informally detectable, yet meaningful element was that while a majority disdained both candidates, a crucial crop of Americans shared more cultural affinities and frustrations with Mr. Trump.
For this show he leads a band featuring two stellar vocalists, the silk-toned Melvis Santa, also from Cuba, and Lara Bello, who hails from Spain and has eclectic affinities.
Zéphir believed that her art-making was propelled by a "guiding" hand; her lush compositions share formal affinities with everything from early-modernist abstraction to Elizabeth Murray's rollicking, shaped canvases.
Works by unschooled artists mingle freely with those by art-world luminaries like Charles Sheeler, Cindy Sherman, and Kara Walker and suggest plausible affinities among them, if not direct influence.
Still, advertisers are widely able to read between the lines, like when Universal Pictures marketed different Straight Outta Compton trailers last year for the "white" and the "African-American" ethnic affinities.
Advertise on Hyperallergic with Nectar Ads Elective Affinities: Edmund de Waal at The Frick Collection is a contemporary installation in an historic collection by an artist particularly suited to this challenge.
RECIPE: BBQ Brisket Fieri promises that half an hour in a pressure cooker will produce the most amazing brisket this side of Texas—or Passover—depending where your brisket affinities lie.
The Trump administration thus faces the urgent task of finding a way to engage with the Visegrad Group that goes beyond the superficial affinities regarding closed immigration policy and nationalist sovereignty.
Halperin has also defended Trump from accusations of racism on the grounds that "Mexico isn't a race," and posed for this notorious picture, so unspoken affinities may be affecting his analysis.
But with "Lewiston/Clarkston," these affinities come into starker relief: Tiny references to one of the two plays bleed into the other, and the two works end on the same day.
This pianist and bandleader on "The Late Show With Stephen Colbert" has a new album out, "Hollywood Africans," a solo effort with a radio-ready finish and plenty of historical affinities.
J.P. If Robert Glasper is our best-known advocate for drawing explicit lines between jazz and hip-hop, he still brings something of a jazz musician's throwback affinities to the job.
"When I create, I start with the affinities between the shapes of human and animal parts, how they can come together in a meaningful way," he explains to The Creators Process.
It would be very unlike him to ditch an ally like Bannon in the wake of a victory, especially over white nationalist affinities that have been public knowledge for some time.
So in fact, there are some affinities between good critics and good actors, who are celebrated not just for playing versions of themselves but for playing wildly different people than themselves.
Their narratives don't mirror each other exactly, but by placing the work side-by-side, their shared affinities can be explored and brought to the surface in ways only previously hinted at.
They often adapted high-brow literature, including works by the Italian author Luigi Pirandello ("Kaos" and "You Laugh"), Russia's Leo Tolstoy ("Resurrection" and "Night Sun") and Johann Wolfgang von Goethe ("Elective Affinities").
That sounds like standard neorealism, and Mr. Sembène's affinities with postwar Italian cinema are apparent, even if they are probably less a matter of influence than of shared ideological and aesthetic impulses.
And the soundtrack, with its slowed-down human voices and drones that could be ambient except for the churning lower frequencies, has some affinities with the aural designs favored by David Lynch.
An exhibition of shared affinities, With the Eyes of the Others is a case in point that postwar Central Eastern Europe was, as Boris Groys put it, the "close Other" of the West.
There are a bunch of obvious cultural and racial affinities at work in this equation, all of which are so obvious and so depressing in their obviousness that I'll just leave them here.
The guide hairs will cause hair to clump as in the upper right, while faded affinities or an outline-based guide (below, left and right) would allow for more natural motion if desired.
Encounters and ingredients pop up like Pokémon did, appearing semi-randomly but with some tendencies or affinities — for example, you're more likely to find school-related foundables by actual schools, and so on.
One might consider possible affinities between Gladman and Henri Michaux, as both writers concern themselves with translating the intensity of experiences into graphic expression –– in Michaux's case, aided by the ingestion of mescaline.
Their affinities find expression in their notion of a "Europe of fatherlands," or Europe of nations, which is a frightening, regressive vision for the future of the EU and Europe as a whole.
"Paprika" has affinities to the montage gags in Buster Keaton's "Sherlock, Jr.," when a projectionist dreams his way into the world onscreen, but what Kon's film truly celebrates is the triumph of animation.
What's more, however old-fashioned it may be for anybody tired of singer-songwriters expressing themselves, this approach also foregrounds her lyrics, and given her affinities for pop songform, she's honed her verse.
In Fröbe-Kapteyn's mixed media works one sees affinities with Forrest Bess' "cuts," Bruce Conner's mandalas, the late paintings of Stephen Mueller, the works of Marilyn Lerner, Chuck Webster, Barbara Takenaga, and Philip Taaffe.
In showcasing the diversity of the ideas and projects of the Japanese artists whose careers it examines, it makes a strong case for the affinities they shared with those of their unknown foreign peers.
For all the affinities that these paintings share — from the viscosity of the brushstrokes to the overlay of cutout shapes to the recurring geometric forms — they never come across as variations on a theme.
Though the resulting two tracks "Tracers" and "It's Gray" later appeared on the Killed By Death Volume 13 compilation, they now get a proper release through the Elective Affinities Corp and Negative Jazz labels.
The all-new News interface design has some visual affinities with the new Music, showing that Apple is working on a cohesive look across its new apps, with bold, all-caps sans serif titles.
Many of the Reichsbuerger, who say they still owe allegiance to Adolf Hitler's Third Reich defeated in World War Two, have affinities with the violent far-right milieu from which the NSU killers sprung.
Even as they've been off pursuing other projects, the intervening years appear to have not tamed their affinities for laborious riffs, textured feedback, long, loud, and slow songs or, uh, their love of weed.
The result, in her words, is a political environment in which the new affinities that shape partisanship are more a matter of choice than something one is born into or passed on by parents.
The 1929 novel about race and identity, set mainly in Harlem, takes place about three decades after "The House of Mirth," but the affinities and distinctions between the two make for an irresistible combination.
Subdued and unobtrusive, they allow works to appear to float in space, as images and objects from various sections of the exhibition come into a visitor's peripheral vision, gently evoking the affinities among them.
"It is absurd that I should be suspected of wanting to jeopardize my position in society and aid through false testimony people with whom I have no connections and affinities," he said in a statement.
In a separate investigation, ProPublica found that Facebook made it possible to exclude specific "ethnic affinities" from seeing ads, noting that ads excluding people based on race are prohibited by federal housing and employment laws.
But it's particularly in the piano music of Reicha, who was born in Prague in 1770 and died in Paris in 1836, that Mr. Ilic sees affinities with some idiosyncratic figures of 20th-century music.
Although produced in a more linguistic and formal climate, his poetry has affinities with that of Remy de Gourmont, whose writings were equally founded on the musicality and syntactic styles of ecclesiastical antiphonaries and hymnals.
"Some of the traders created the chat rooms and then invited one another to join, based on their trading activities and personal affinities, creating closed circles of trust," the commission said in a news release.
Their camp includes Friedrich Merz, an edgy right-wing lawyer pushed out of the party hierarchy by Merkel nearly two decades ago who has returned from a successful business career to challenge Merkel's mainstream affinities.
Lessons in cross-cultural affinities become explicit in the exhibition's final rooms, where there is an exquisitely inlaid turquoise and mother-of-pearl mask that found its way to the Renaissance duke Cosimo de Medici.
And while you'll most likely never catch a choker on Beckham these days (though she sported all manner of them in her Spice Girls phase), we're guessing Hadid's and Beckham's style affinities will indeed intersect again.
Despite her creative affinities with technology, she had been defeated by the light switches in her room, at the Berlin Soho House, and was unable to reduce them to a level below a sleep-disturbing dimness.
Facebook will disable use of the advertising tool, called 'ethnic affinities,' for ads that offer housing, employment and the extension of credit; areas where certain groups have historically faced discrimination, Facebook said in a blog post.
In various ways, his work may be seen to share certain affinities with that of notable art brut, outsider, or self-taught image-makers whose art is similarly diagrammatic, or features real or imaginary mathematical elements.
"Trump also spoke on his affinities for McDonalds (for its standardization practices and cleanliness) and the late Michael Jackson, whom he called a friend, but said was ruined by plastic surgery: "He was an unbelievably talented guy.
However close the cultural affinities between Britain and its partners in the Anglosphere, the contribution of their trade to British output is much smaller than the EU's, as are the contributions of the world's big emerging economies.
Ms. Jagger was a fiercely independent creator who adhered to her own instincts and vision; though her work has affinities with feminist art, Land Art and Post-Minimalism, she never aligned with any prevailing styles or movements.
It is an entropy that is stressed out and seething and suspicious, perpetually in conflict and generally without context; it is lying and signifying and blustering and ruled by instinct and omen, idiot affinities and rude whimsy.
" The Daily Beast quoted Spencer saying: "Breitbart has elective affinities with the Alt Right, and the Alt Right has clearly influenced Breitbart … In this way, Breitbart has acted as a 'gateway' to Alt Right ideas and writers.
Yet, as the biennial's title Affective Affinities, suggests, one is expected to come to each curated section, each solo project, each discrete discussion led by one's feelings, discovering a rapport with the work (or not) over time.
Yet her intentions are clearly to work through the writing of an author who used her sexuality as a weapon to bring fire to her words, regardless of any personal affinities she may have for the author.
What is true about Donald Trump's ad targeting is that it was at least partially aimed at suppressing voters by using Facebook's "ethnic affinities" option to create "dark posts" visible only to those whom it wanted to see.
Despite the fact that African-American women's consumer preferences and brand affinities are reflected in marketing across most major U.S. industries, including food, fashion, and beauty, Black brides are practically non-existent on mainstream bridal magazines and websites.
It is unlikely, though, that any previous story has likened interrogation by Stalin's secret police to a game of cricket, as a character does in "The Devils' Dance", a beguiling novel of sinister enchantments and mind-stretching affinities.
In the early 1990s, some in the foreign policy community thought Turkey was uniquely positioned to guide the newly independent Turkic states of Central Asia — whose citizens share cultural and linguistic affinities with Turks — in stable, democratic governance.
By checking a few boxes under the "Demographics" tab, I was able to exclude black, Asian, and Latino "affinities" from seeing my ad — a convenient proxy that would all but ensure that nobody but white people would show up.
The community consisted of a select few who were superfans like me, and people who seemed to be casual fans of his or just had affinities for comedy who had found themselves in a manic, NBC-heavy rabbit hole.
"This solves a mystery for the affinities of this giant mouth and demonstrates that the two previous hypotheses—whether the mouth belongs to Anomalocaris or a penis worm—are not exactly right, but not entirely wrong either," Vinther said.
"HUD's investigation into Facebook began in late 2016 following the publication of a ProPublica article that described how Facebook had enabled advertisers to exclude—in an apparent violation of federal law—categories of users based on what Facebook termed "Ethnic Affinities.
These photographs of Moran, the Bierstadts, and others, with their self-conscious affinities with the fine arts, run counter to the unbroken 19th-century production of pictures more or less determined by practical considerations, though many possess considerable aesthetic value.
Using the global phenomenon of K-pop as a critical lens for popular media and consumer culture, the exhibition makes a case for the ways in which K-pop fandom itself is a contested battleground for cultural affinities and political ideologies.
"We are writing to express our deep concerns with reports that Facebook's 'Ethnic Affinities' advertising customization feature allows for advertisers to exclude specific racial and ethnic groups when placing housing advertisements," they wrote in a letter to Facebook on Tuesday.
In her National Book Award-winning story collection, "Ship Fever and Other Stories," Andrea Barrett shows her affinities for biology, 18th- and 19th-century settings, and scientific figures real and imagined — Carl Linnaeus, the 18th-century Swedish botanist, among them.
These works have affinities to the late 1960s and early '70s Japanese movement "Mono-ha" (or "School of Things"), which was largely ignored in the US until Blum & Poe's 2012 exhibition Requiem for the Sun: The Art of Mono-ha.
Facebook has come under fire before for offering advertising options that enable discrimination: Advertisers were once allowed to exclude certain "ethnic affinities" from their ad audiences or to target users based on sexual orientation, before the company worked to remove the targeting options.
It might have been called, Foreign Bodies, because by juxtaposing pre-Renaissance art with contemporary garments it creates a surreal effect; rather than calling attention to visual affinities, the result is to demonstrate that fashion artifacts are strikingly unlike Catholic works of art.
Harrington, distressed by the Socialist Party's rightward turn—it had deep Cold War affinities, and the post-split remainder, which renamed itself Social Democrats USA (SDUSA), drifted in a Reaganite direction in the 1980s—formed the Democratic Socialist Organizing Committee (DSOC) in 1973.
In which case the president is deciding between trusting the conservative legal establishment, which hasn't led him astray so far, and trusting his own affinities, which seemingly point toward Kethledge as a compromise between the legal elites and the Barrett-preferring base.
Looking to Daumier and Goya, specifically the latter's Los caprichos, for inspiration, Gropper became an influential cartoonist for The New Yorker, The Nation, Vanity Fair, among other publications, as well as a political threat — the government blacklisted him for exhibiting Communist affinities.
I fear that our society is suffering from a new McCarthyism, in which, as Mr. Damore and, before him, Larry Summers discovered, even to mention the possibility that inborn differences play a role in our vocational affinities is to lose one's livelihood.
But most of Florida more resembles the North in its cultural affinities; the larger trend is that ambivalence over Trump still doesn't appear to be moving a critical mass of Southern suburbanites, many of them culturally conservative Christians, away from the GOP. 3.
Ms. DeVos has some obvious affinities with Mr. Trump: Her husband is an heir to the fortune created by Amway, a company that has been accused of being a fraudulent scheme and, in 2011, paid $150 million to settle a class-action suit.
Similar to how ProPublica illustrated last year and again just last month how housing ads on Facebook could exclude users by so-called "ethnic" and "multicultural" affinities, this new report shows how the social network also lets advertisers exclude certain age groups for job ads.
If Facebook agreed with regulators that inferred political opinions or 'ethnic affinities' were just the same as collecting that information explicitly, they'd have to ask for separate, explicit consent to do so — and users would have to be able to say no to it.
Far from an isolated and remote struggle with which we might choose to be in solidarity, the occupation of Palestine and the movement against it bear deep affinities with movements against displacement and dispossession in the United States, from Standing Rock to the Bronx.
Last fall, ProPublica reported that advertisers could use those tools to exclude certain races — or what the social network called "ethnic affinities" — from housing and employment ads, a potential violation of the Fair Housing Act of 1968 and the Civil Rights Act of 1964.
"We're adding new first and third-party data connections to Customer Insights that allow our customers to understand, for example audience memberships, brand affinities, demographic, psychographic and other characteristics of customers that are stored and then harnessed from Dynamics 365 Customer Insights," Philips said.
This trajectory resonates with Detroit's DIY gallery culture, and is perhaps what led Hoffmann to single out Martínez for the slot in the 2017 "Detroit Affinities" line-up, which alternates between Detroit-based artists and out-of-towners whose work resonates with one another.
There are so many different cross sections of the information embedded in each entry, including the types of music featured and their respective political affinities that the possibilities for constructing narratives from this work are staggering — from Angolan merengue and Irish anarcho-punk to Thai folk music.
" In it, he maps out everything we are witnessing today, from the slow erosion of the welfare state to the return of nationalisms to the realization that the idea "that social and political institutions and affinities naturally and necessarily follow economic ones" is a "reductivist fallacy.
The court, if it can muster five votes, could affirm Salman's conviction and reject the ruling in Newman and Chiasson's case, holding that even inside information shared purely from the affinities of family or friendship, without any "material benefit" to the tipper, cannot be used to trade.
Cousins also brings the camera inside the Art Institute to show affinities between the main gallery's translucent ceilings, which allow light to seep in from above, and the ceilings designed for The Trial, shot in the abandoned Gare d'Orsay in Paris, as well as those in Kane.
No matter the temperamental affinities that might exist between some nonwhites and the Republican Party, attempts to bring them into the fold inevitably run up against a key reality: that movement conservatism—the starve-the-beast, libertarian mode that dominates contemporary Republican politics—is a white ideology.
HUD had opened a case in late 2016 in response to a ProPublica article that said Facebook gives advertisers the ability to exclude specific groups it calls "ethnic affinities" from seeing their ads when their social media habits identified them as black, Hispanic or Asian-American.
Vincent Canby, who reviewed "Daughter of the Nile" in The New York Times when it was shown at the 1988 New York Film Festival, patronizingly characterized Mr. Hou, then well into his career, as "an earnest film student," noting his affinities to the Japanese master Yasujiro Ozu.
In many ways, Darboven has more affinities with her fellow European Marcel Broodthaers — whose "Musée d'Art Moderne, Department des Aigles," a similarly infinite-yet-incomplete historical archive, was on view at the Museum of Modern Art this year — than with the Conceptualists she met in New York.
Interview subjects describe the material support provided by anarcho-punk collectives to the Zapatistas and political affinities between the two, but bring up doubts about the cult of personality the global left has fostered for the movement's leaders and the actions of the National Liberation Zapatista Army.
The changes come two weeks after ProPublica, a non-profit investigative news organization, published an article showing how Facebook allowed advertisers to exclude groups on the basis of ethnic affinities, a practice it said may violate federal housing and civil rights laws passed in the 1960s.
Readily available connections are also present in some of the exhibition's performance-based pieces — the black and white studio photographs of Katalin Ladik's and Tibor Hajas's naked and often distorted bodies share obvious affinities with the work of Hannah Wilke, Vito Acconci, Ana Mendieta, or the Viennese Actionists.
In Schöpke's most gestural, energetic, abstract compositions, some viewers may also find affinities with the distinctive lines of such well-known modernists as Cy Twombly or Joan Mitchell, next to whose pastel-on-paper abstractions Schöpke's own, made with plain pencil and crayons, would certainly provoke a fascinating dialogue.
"This allows organizations to harness the vast amounts of social sentiment, be able to analyze it, and then take action on how to use these insights to increase brand loyalty, as well as understand what newsworthy events will help provide different brand affinities across an organization," Taylor said.
Unable to reconcile societally unacceptable feelings of what Sedgwick calls "homosociality" — strong but not necessarily sexual affinities men have for other men — with a culture that is overly preoccupied in shaming potential homosexuality, men end up using women as a kind of proxy for their feelings about one another.
Though we would have preferred learning more about the company's inner workings — and its challenges —  Sharkey's marketing approach, her avowed belief that sales come from "understanding people, first and foremost" and her emphasis on "connecting people around their affinities and passions," may well be a strategy that pays.
Last fall, Facebook came under fire after ProPublica reported that advertisers could use its targeting to exclude certain races, or what the social network called "ethnic affinities," from housing and employment ads, a potential violation of the Fair Housing Act of 1968 and the Civil Rights Act of 1964.
The reason why I wrote this book is that I was so irked by the ways that people who are concerned about nutrition and health would talk about the relationships of communities of color to fast food — as if these are inevitable affinities that were in people's blood.
The 'new anti-Semitism' also differs from the traditional form in the political affinities of its alleged culprits: where we are used to thinking that anti-Semites come from the political right, the new anti-Semites are, in the eyes of the accusers, primarily on the political left.
Sargent's Daughters' rationale for exhibiting these artists together stems from the thematic affinities in their work: Abonnenc scrutinizes colonial histories and the lingering stains left behind; Garcia's work concerns the fraught relationship between Mexico and the United States, filtered through the subjective lens of his own upbringing in both countries.
An article by ProPublica published last month reported that advertisers could use Facebook targeting to exclude certain races, or what the company calls "ethnic affinities," from housing and employment ads, potentially putting the social network in violation of the Fair Housing Act of 1968 and the Civil Rights Act of 1964.
Approaching Mouton's artwork from a purely formalist perspective would do it an injustice, while dwelling on the visual affinities between her work and that of the New York School artists seems redundant: from Helen Frankenthaler's soak-stain method to the sweeping gestures of Robert Motherwell, the art historical relationship is palpable.
The parallel first shots — the frame opens on the corridor of a mental hospital in Fuller's film, on a nursing-home hallway in Scorsese's — suggest affinities: like "Shock Corridor," the new movie approaches a sensational mystery (Jimmy Hoffa's disappearance) through the eyes of an unreliable narrator (Robert De Niro's Frank Sheeran).
In addition to his deep knowledge of Modern art, an interest sparked initially by Allan Stone, his influences and affinities ranged from film noir to Petey Wheatstraw ("the devil's son-in-law") to Robert Johnson to medieval Catholic reliquaries to Horace Pippin to Florine Stettheimer to The Three Stooges to Athanasius Kircher.
To some degree, Baron's boxes share affinities with those of the Ohio-based, elderly American maker of box-assemblage works, La Wilson, who has long been a student of Buddhist thought and whose works transform ordinary objects, such as clothespins or thread spools, with a sense of magic, gentle humor and heightened awareness.
Soon thereafter, hip-hop star Vic Mensa published a powerful report in Time magazine (video below) based on his experience in Palestine as part of a delegation of black American activists and artists organized by the Dream Defenders, that highlighted the affinities between white supremacy in the United States and Israeli Apartheid.
New York's Ricco/Maresca Gallery will present his mixed-media-on-wood paintings, which share some affinities with the ink-on-paper architectural drawings of the contemporary British self-taught artist Albert, who uses only one name, and whose works are represented by Henry Boxer, a London-based dealer and longtime OAF exhibitor.
Facebook infers affinities linked to individual users by collecting and processing interest signals their web activity generates, such as likes on Facebook Pages or what people look at when they're browsing outside Facebook — off-site intel it gathers via an extensive network of social plug-ins and tracking pixels embedded on third party websites.
There are ideological affinities as well as funding streams linking Moscow and many of the nationalists to Russia's west, and the most empowered populist within the European Union, Hungary's Viktor Orban, is explicit about his intent to replace liberal democracy with a form of "Christian democracy" that looks suspiciously like de facto one-party rule.
Those now well-known, critically praised concoctions, luscious and oozing a fecund air, share spiritual affinities as much with the colorful experiments of such Early Modernist abstractionists as Wassily Kandinsky or Sonia and Robert Delaunay as they do with some of the much later, exuberant abstractions of the American painter Elizabeth Murray (21941–203).
I was able to visit the biennial and sit down with Gabriel Pérez-Barreiro who is this year's curator (and also the director and chief curator of the Colección Patricia Phelps de Cisneros) to talk about what affective affinities means, and how (and why) he structured the biennial to be premised on the presence and attention of the visitor.
We know a little about the culture and internal dynamics of the Supreme Court, and we know enough to say that the justices form friendships, personal affinities, and ways to set aside political and legal differences to allow them the relationships which immunize the Supreme Court from some of the dysfunction that affects other branches of government.
From slight disparities in pronunciation (I feel this one so hard — the most basic words I struggle with are milk, poem, and pillow) to affinities for strange foods (Romanian pancakes, anyone?) to questionable homeopathic remedies for everyday ailments (more on this in a moment), each slight variation is a pointed reminder of where your family came from.
An independent scholar who has lived and worked in the United States since the mid-21999s and has been based in New York for many years, Tomii has focused on the artists and art movements of post-World War II Japan, carefully classifying their evolution and ideas, as well as their constituent parts, antecedents and relevant affinities.
Of course Part 8 — whose affinities stretch from the thriller "The Night of the Hunter" (1955) to Gaspar Noé's surreal "Enter the Void" (2009) (both of which are available to rent on Amazon, Google, iTunes and YouTube; "Void" is a featured film on Hulu) — is not the only part of the new "Twin Peaks" with cinematic resonances.
"Given the level at which they're profiling we shouldn't tell them anymore," says Boiten, when asked whether people should feel okay feeding Facebook info about their 'line in the sand' — pointing to another controversy that arose last year when it emerged Facebook's ad capabilities could be used to actively exclude or include people with specific ethnic affinities (aka 'racial profiling').
Under Rove's guidance, the Bush team surveyed large samples of individual voters to assess their beliefs and behaviors, looking at such things as church attendance, magazine subscriptions, and organization memberships, and then used the results to identify 30 different kinds of supporters, each with specific interests, lifestyles, ideologies, and affinities, from suburban moms who support the Second Amendment to veterans who love NASCAR.
Its current presentation, which was organized in collaboration with La maison rouge in Paris and the Collection de l'Art Brut, and shown at each of those institutions in different forms before coming to New York, will surely provoke discussion of its subject's rich affinities with certain avant-garde art forms of past decades, including varieties of Surrealist and Abstract-Expressionist art.
Beyond the direct affinities among images from America's 19th-century past and our picture-saturated present, so many of the photographs in East of the Mississippi represent more general photographic urges, impulses that remain with us: we'll never stop embodying our modest fantasies of leisure in photographic form, and, though our excitement has mostly migrated to the digital sphere, we still make a fetish of technological progress.
In Massey's spare line and simple, flat shapes, some viewers may find affinities with those of the African-American self-taught artist Bill Traylor, while his quizzical fantasy characters find echoes in the art brut drawings of such non-American creators as the Austrian Josef Bachler (1914-1979), the German Ernst Kolb (1927-1993), and the Iranians Davood Koochaki (born 1939) and Mehrdad Rashidi (born 1963).
In fact, many of the pieces on view seem to feel right at home alongside better-known, canonical works of modern and contemporary art, considering, for example, the formal affinities between the Gee's Bend quilts and modernist geometric abstraction, or the Souls Grown Deep artists' inventive handling of found materials in ways that seem to parallel (or unwittingly presage) quite a few modernist or postmodernist gestures.
With their downtown New York, David Lynchian aesthetic — and a bit of "Pee-wee's Playhouse" (803-90), Martin Scorsese's "After Hours" (1985) and Frank Moore and Jim Self's experimental video, "Beehive" (1985), thrown in — the "Suburban" photographs, as they were called, have been showing up in galleries and art fairs in the last few years, exhibited alone and alongside younger artists with whom Mr. DeSana has affinities.
As with many older painters, his canvases from the last ten years of his life seem to have come to him in an effortless flow, in such an unencumbered and natural way that they evoke the late Pierre Bonnard's own extraordinary ease with paint, even if Bissière's work had more affinities with the northern light painted by Corot than with the Mediterranean glow bathing Bonnard's last works.
Many viewers may find in Munroe's work the serenity that classical Buddhist art both embodies and conveys — as well as affinities with those spare, richly colored Tantric paintings from Rajasthan, in northwestern India, which in recent years have seized the attention of Western artists and collectors alike (thanks largely to the success of the contemporary French poet Franck André Jamme's book, Tantra Song: Tantric Painting from Rajasthan).
And once you've read enough about the younger set you might be ready to graduate to higher education: Zadie Smith's satirical stunner "On Beauty," inspired by E. M. Forster's "Howards End," features an unmoored British-born art history professor on an elite American campus and his mixed-race family, and displays Smith's affinities for both young adults and the elders charged with edifying them.
The late Annabella Ogden Proudlock, who died last year, was an arts activist, collector and art dealer who co-founded Harmony Hall, an art gallery in Ocho Ríos, on Jamaica's north coast; she once told me that, over the years, her gallery showed and actually somehow managed to sell Daley's unusual works to collectors who appreciated their strangeness and their affinities with classic, European art brut.
Just as one might read a poem and alternately focus on its cadence, phrases, structure, or references, or sound, one can see Huffman's installation alternately as: a landscape peppered with violent interruption; the train of thought of "Stanza"'s female protagonist enriched by objects from her consciousness; an immersive light and sound experience in which the viewer's affinities are the primary indicators of meaning.

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