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"daubs" Antonyms

102 Sentences With "daubs"

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

Its scattering of paint tubes evokes metallic crinkles despite Freilicher's gauzy style, and the blue and green strokes she's marked on the palette — are they "daubs," or simply daubs?
We see clots and daubs, smeared surfaces, and gouged lines.
Same technique — a screen print with a few added daubs.
There are secret daubs of mousse at the roots to create lasting volume.
Behind him patterned wallpaper enlarged from Vuillard adds hallucinatory daubs of dancing paint.
Mr Barr's canvas is large, and he daubs it with colour and human interest.
Picasso produced surrealist plays and poetry; Victor Hugo offered shadowy, haunting daubs of paint.
Genya (Anna Lentz), the teenage daughter of a local noblewoman, watches as he daubs.
They are painted with photorealist precision, spattered with daubs of pigment that suggest bullet holes.
Silk cords dangle from one painting; another, on red velvet, entails big daubs of concrete.
Those daubs can become a house, or a tree, or a row of factory buildings.
Yet, daubs of black and pastel colors forming vertical lines faintly evidence the underlying grid.
Sitting over them are large, flat daubs of translucent scarlet and opaque orange and green.
These daubs essentially serve as structural elements, anchoring the painting in the world of the viewer.
De Forest made these beams with daubs of acrylic paint up to the size of a Hershey's Kiss.
Later, the performers elicited daubs of tone from conventional instruments, as if translating those found objects into spectral music.
They're all rendered with smooth daubs of digital color, with pixels mixed and overlaid as a painter would handle pigments.
And all so I could then paint the exoskeleton with thick daubs of poster paint and hang them on a stick.
In his last decade, he produced luminous, pixelated images of skyscrapers by applying paint in tiny daubs on sheets of cardboard.
She shows herself at half-length, applying a few daubs to a painting-in-progress, a glowing Virgin-and-child scene.
Most weasel species communicate with one another over large home ranges through frequent daubs of a pungent fluid excreted by their anal glands.
In the yellow ground between these clusters, Ledgerwood paints orange, fuchsia, and dark yellow daubs, as well as dripping splashes of metallic gold.
The works are completed (or elegantly defaced) with spray paint, scratchy daubs of black soap and big, velvety pours of the melted soap mixture.
She carefully pulls a diamanté out of a pile and, using tweezers, daubs it with glue and then applies it to her nail bed.
Applied to the rice in daubs, alongside strands of iceberg lettuce, it brings an unobtrusive creaminess; more lavish and there's a risk of glop.
In a downstairs gallery, a 1967 abstract painting by Richard Pousette-Dart, a haze of blue and yellow daubs, reflects that artist's cosmological interests.
Pointillist textures have become airier or ceded to scaled-up expanses of short, boxy daubs of color, widely used to warp near and far.
Highlights are rendered not so much as brush strokes as brush touches, some of the daubs perfect circles that appear as little sequins of light.
Her technique runs the spectrum from daubs of frosting-like paint, to swirling, tender brushstrokes, rendered with a loaded brush, to delicate investigations of light.
In small oil paintings, abstract strokes and daubs of color coalesce into sketchy, featureless figures; in related ink drawings they resemble large-headed African sculptures.
Rather, the paintings — with their holes, stains, daubs of paint, and scraped surfaces — come across as the inescapable state of things, our shared material condition.
This one is 12 feet tall and appears to be white but is in fact a pattern of rainbow-hued daubs that shimmer in the sunlight.
With its jollity and brassy daubs of color, it's definitely not the slate-grey narrative westerners are accustomed to seeing when it comes to the DPRK.
Wong makes myriad lines, dots, daubs, and short, lush brushstrokes, eventually arriving at an imaginary landscape that tilts away from the picture plane at an odd angle.
A transparent sheet of silk or nylon has been stretched over the bars to create a scrim on which a few daubs of paint might be added.
She's played with styles, working in Impressionist daubs and smears, the high-contrast black and white of Banksy-style street art, and the bold color of pop art.
Another is an untitled work from 19133: nothing but daubs of blue, connected by a sinuous smear of the same, applied wet-on-wet to a field of cream.
His delivery, keeningly high when he daubs on the Auto-Tune, occasionally lower and more natural when he's straightforwardly rapping, glows with wistful cheer, creating a bizarre and welcome mood.
Holding the bauble carefully in your hand, or supported on a table, apply your strokes with at least an 8-milimeter brush and thick daubs of gouache, using water only sparingly.
And in "Starry Night," these strokes — in yellow, blue and black — define the surface of a dark lake, and, in light turquoise, the adjacent shore, where the daubs resemble radiant cobblestones.
His American work has new robustness of material, scale and color, although the swarms of paint daubs here first appear in print, in a yellow poster for the London Underground from 1937.
On a recent cold evening, briny Little Gun oysters from Long Island were dressed in hopeful spring finery: milky green pools of olive oil and parsley, like daubs of watercolor before they dry.
With his virtuosic, veteran crew, Mr. Spielberg paints the scene vividly and with daubs of beauty; most notably, he creates distinct visual realms for the story's two main overlapping, at times colliding worlds.
On this version, by the young jazz combo Lioness, Amanda Monaco daubs at single notes on her guitar, painting little shapes around the alto saxophonist Alexa Tarantino's dewy, unhurried treatment of the melody.
Here, the metallic dancebeats skitter and click independently, like they're supposed to, while the keyboards play simple, repetitive tunelets that mesmerize, with conventional daubs of ostinato atmosphere softening the linear boundaries between each instrument.
Impressionistic daubs of sound—a soft strike on the center of a cymbal, a tap on the edge of a drum, a scrape of a stick across a drumhead—conjure a sense of limitless space.
"Go for very basic lines and a couple of daubs of colored ink and you'll be surprised at how beautifully it will come out," says Kent, who likes to pare designs down to their simplest elements.
Compressed into a tight space, the various sharp sonic elements construct a surface that's electric rather than electronic, hooks crackling, beats rattling, although sometimes he daubs on small gurgles of Auto-Tune as a token sweetener.
Then comes cart after cart of rich golden cake with tiny sinkholes, leaf-shaped buns hiding daubs of purple taro, pale green puffs wafting the telltale scent of durian and more desserts than I could ever try.
The 50-odd works here depict the Île-de-France region that surrounds Paris, as well as a few British sites, with delicate, divided brush marks and soft light effects rendered with daubs of gray and white.
On "Who's on the Playlist," as the pianist Sullivan Fortner traces the chords to Miles Davis and Bill Evans's "Blue in Green," Overall, 36, daubs his snare drum with brushes, then adds a splatter of electronic percussion.
In the lower left-hand side, James has painted a tree of white blossoms, possibly a white dogwood, by applying daubs of paint that recall Vincent van Gogh and his love of Japanese prints and Asian scrolls.
Thanks to Roy Thomas Baker's production, which daubs on the oohing multi-tracked harmonies endemic to power pop and pre-punk hard rock, their debut has a cheerfully corny quality — red-blooded American boys play new wave music!
In his earlier paintings Wong tended to cover the surface with myriad marks, from daubs and dashes to lines of varying lengths and widths; grouped together, they articulate a landscape made up of simple and direct paint application.
Influenced by John Cage, the score consists of large pages divided into squares of enigmatic instructions for the four vocalists: "Sharp stabbing sounds" and harsh daubs of ink in one box, for example; "Your favorite pop tune" in another.
Swearingen's rendering methods feel as instinctive as they are clever; here, the artist used daubs of white paint and patches of impasto to suggest fluffy balls of cotton in a panorama of farm workers processing a freshly picked crop.
Daubs of orange and blue shadow in watercolors like "Crouching Nude in Shoes and Black Stockings, Back View," 1912, look like bruises — though it's important to note that in many of his self-portraits he treats himself the same way.
This is how I described the paintings in his first exhibition at Karma: Wong makes myriad lines, dots, daubs, and short, lush brushstrokes, eventually arriving at an imaginary landscape that tilts away from the picture plane at an odd angle.
But what the faces are really doing, along with the daubs, the strokes and the intricate but soft-edged zigzag patterns that occasionally appear, is keeping your conscious attention engaged while Ms. Gendel's indelible colors stream directly into your unconscious.
At Shrine, in works from the early 1990s, Kornegay's "Untitled (Black Woman)" uses an oddly shaped board, scraps of black Naugahyde (artificial leather), sheet-metal shavings (for hair), and a few daubs of paint to fashion a female face and her robed figure.
With however much love the younger Lithgow daubs the memory — and "Stories by Heart" is in essence a son's tribute — he cannot quite overpaint the other colors of that exciting life, just as the barber cannot help revealing more than he intends.
The filmmakers make good use of their locations and the creeping camera movements and, on occasion, they brighten the gloom with daubs of color — with Connor's knitting, a gaudily painted car, the forest green — that add vibrancy to a tale that's mutely, almost reluctantly told.
Young folk left daubs of lipstick on them, blew bubbles with them, flicked cream, banged them on the bottom of the cup to get one last taste—and repeatedly made them march up the Hill of Destiny, and plunge again, for the hell of it.
If anything, Ms. Zexer is at her best when she daubs in color and minutiae, as in an almost interstitial scene in which Jalila bakes bread on top of an oven, an action that says something about both this specific woman and the world she inhabits.
Metro Boomin and CuBeatz' production barely uses drums—just a few daubs of sub-bass and a pointillist sprinkle of hi-hats as Uzi spits over what sounds like a lost Jamie xx xylophone loop, overlaid with barely audible synths that sound like neon skyscrapers looming in the background.
Although shorter than previous blasts, this one, launched from the roof of a university library, was no less awesome: it sent streams of color whizzing upwards before erupting into bright puffs, like daubs on a painter's palette, which left in their wake a dark, billowing mass of smoke.
" He daubs paint on the picture on the easel, then turns to face me as I add, "Roger, could it be that what you're really trying to capture in paint or in your fine-tuned photographs is the consciousness we humans have, uniquely among all species, of our own consciousness?
In "Purple Wind," Katz applies the paint in four different ways – from the flat purple wall of the building, to the whitish, vertical striations of the five windows, to the black and gray diagonal strokes of the bare tree branches in the foreground to the white daubs laid across the striated windows.
" The poem starts to conflate its own colors with the names of painters' dyes ("Last streaks of sunset: alizarin") and crests with an anecdote about "the old art historian" who told Hass to pick up a brush and paint "small rectangular daubs so that they shimmer"—or else to "shut up about Cézanne.
But the lion's body is a darker tint than the arm, and it is more embellished, with its face and mane described through yet another approach, in careful daubs of what could be a wash of terre verte or diluted ink, while the temple is dashed off with restless sepia strokes, a quick architectural sketch.
Or, as re-envisioned by Chris Kajioka at Senia, in Honolulu, it might be a mossy cliff of charred cabbage — a wink at an iceberg wedge — dusted with shio kombu (shredded kelp boiled in soy and mirin), soaked through with dashi and ginger, and surrounded by daubs of heady green goddess dressing and buttermilk turned to gel.
Her best acrylics and watercolors of loosely gridded, wristy daubs are among the most satisfying feats (and my personal favorites) of the Washington Color School, a group that included Morris Louis, Kenneth Noland, and others associated with the prescriptive aesthetics of the critic Clement Greenberg: painting shorn of imagery, the illusion of depth, and rhetorical gesture.
Nguyen-Vo makes their invisibility and inferiority apparent in one tiny, dark scene that departs from the much larger, candy-colored beach views of tourists: centered on an alleyway of murky colors, a single resort worker stumbles out of a dive bar and falls; his abstracted figure disappears into thick daubs of neon lights and is nearly indistinguishable from those watery swirls.
Advertise on Hyperallergic with Nectar Ads PHILADELPHIA — On a visit to the Barnes Foundation in Merion, Pennsylvania, well before the museum's move to Philadelphia's Center City in 2012, a friend and I paused before one of the collection's 181 works by Pierre-Auguste Renoir (103–1919) to admire how the Impressionist painter intensified his strokes of cobalt blue with daubs of teal.
The former shows definitively figurative forms of whales and primates that are cheerful yet unsettling: largely rendered in bright pastels are pretty patterns that replace what would be skin or fur — but the whales are beached, mouths open as if gasping for air; and the apes, with generous daubs of paint bordering their limbs, seem to plod on the canvas as if they had trodden through slick tar pits.
Nothing Talbot writes credibly explains how these ancient sculptors—driven by a naturalistic aesthetic so intense that they labored in marble in order to replicate muscles beneath the surface of human skin and to painstakingly re-create delicate drapery—would allow painters to effectively obliterate the subtlety of their hard effort with daubs of color, at least in the way that pigment is unconvincingly applied to modern replicas.
The rebels were alternately dressed in tailored or safari suits; striped polo shirts; two-tone work jackets patched with flap pockets; checkered shirts splashed with scrawls and painterly daubs; V-neck sweaters that looked as if they had been swiped from granddad's closet; camouflage overshirts patterned with random slashing; high-waist trousers so wide at the hem a wearer would not get far as he bushwhacked through that jungle.
But, because work is a kind of cleansing of the mind—the strokes and daubs requiring an even distribution of pressure and a continual maintenance of strength in the wrist and the fingers that is like kinesthetic concentration—and also because she knows the words of Ecclesiastes so well, she does not feel too guilty letting them become abstract, like music, like the beating of her pulse echoed by a mouth that belongs to someone else, a mouth issuing not conversation that needs to be attended to but edicts, or, even better, prayers: paint, draw, fill, transform .
He did very few portraits and very few still life. Almost all of his work is in oil. In some of his oil works, he used the impasto technique where the paint rises off the surface of the painting in thick daubs.
She left in 1921 and was recruited among other students to paint sets for theatres. It was in this work that she met Oreste Allegri Jr., an Italian scene painter whom she would marry in 1922.Daubs, Katie. "Our City, Our Art".
He has been linked with the Stuckists art movement because of their similar response to the Young British Artists, the Turner Prize and conceptual art. However, he is equally opposed to their art and, when the Stuckists offered a donation of work to the Tate Gallery, he declared: "If the Tate accepts these ridiculous daubs The Jackdaw will dance naked - except for his favourite swastika armband - down Whitehall singing Mamma Mia." "Daubs and Daubers", stuckism.com Retrieved April 3, 2006 He called the Charles Saatchi's New Blood exhibition in 2004, "an assortment of tricks and stunts that was promoted with desperation and hitherto unsuspected tastelessness ... He promoted a rotten, talentless painter called Stella Vine to public notoriety".
Fused Foot Star (Extension Bar with Wild Loops and Daubs) (diptych) by James Jessop, BBC - Your Paintings. Retrieved 2014-01-05. While working as a security guard, he exhibited in Charles Saatchi's March 2004 New Blood exhibition. Jessop was shortlisted for the £25,000 Threadneedle Prize at the Mall Galleries, London in 2010.
The technique, which creates warmth and depth, is called preciosismo. This technique leads to fine brush work, which, when observed closely, looks like dashes and daubs of paint. When the viewer stands back from the painting, it comes together to create a wondrous whole, that is light and airy. This use of color also shows how Goya inspired Fortuny.
He was reviewed by Paul Clark in the Evening Standard as "a top draughtsman with a funky fluid style" and in Art Review as someone who "augurs well for the future of British painting".Evening Standard, 10 January 2001 and Art Review (undated), cited by Charles Thomson in "Daubs and Daubers" on stuckism.com. Retrieved 19 March 2008.
This makes Joanna indignant and she refuses her consent. Ian delivers his message to Saladin, after which Saladin grants Ian leave to search for Barbara. During his search Ian is attacked by bandits and knocked out. One of the bandits, Ibrahim, ties him down with stakes in the hot sun and daubs him with honey, aiming to kill him via scaphism.
Toronto Star. July 9, 2016. Katie Daubs World War II Russian syringe for direct inter-human blood transfusion. Robertson published his findings in the British Medical Journal in 1916 and, with the help of a few like-minded individuals (including the eminent physician Edward William Archibald (1872-1945), who introduced the citrate anticoagulant method), was able to persuade the British authorities of the merits of blood transfusion.
Small appears as a major character in the Michael Ondaatje novel In the Skin of a Lion. The events concerning him in the novel after his disappearance are fictitious. Small appears as a real-life disappearance case in The Convict Lover by Canadian author Merilyn Simonds. In 2019 a book by Toronto Star feature writer Katie Daubs, marking the 100th anniversary of Small's disappearance, was widely anticipated.
The priest will use a special ladle to proffer the holy ash to the layperson, who in turn daubs it on his or her forehead and eyelids, and may take some home for use after a Kushti ceremony. A Zoroastrian priest does not preach or hold sermons, but rather just tends to the fire. Fire Temple attendance is particularly high during seasonal celebrations (Gahambars), and especially for the New Year (Noruz). The priesthood is trigradal.
He not only loved to employ different techniques but also a variety of materials on his canvases, including sand, cement, cloth, nylon net and jute. In some exhibition he had tried to used jute canvases in place of cloth canvases for few of his paintings. He daubs paint with a piece of cloth and in his remarkably successful white "Cobweb" he had tried yet another technique which was supposed to be a secret.
The story opens with a hunched old man, Pete Jensen, who lives in a shack in the town of Furnace Flats. He slaughters a goat and daubs its blood within a hexagon drawn on the floor of his shack. A young man, Nick Richards, comes to town, claiming that the old tramp was his uncle. Alerted to his presence, the town's sheriff informs Nick that his Uncle Pete was found dead of undetermined causes and no one in the town liked Pete.
In reality, Erickson was wearing a white blanket over which were scattered artfully placed daubs of shaving cream—real whipped cream would have melted under the heat of the studio lights (although the cream on her finger was real). In concerts, when about to play the song, Alpert would tell the audience, "Sorry, we can't play the cover for you." The art was parodied by several groups including one-time A&M; band Soul Asylum and by comedian Pat Cooper for his album Spaghetti Sauce and Other Delights. The singles included the title cut, "Lollipops and Roses", and "A Taste of Honey".
The angular cutting into the basic composition with these doors adds dynamism and gives it an energetic feel. In all her later paintings she used a unique style of squarish daubs of paint applied on the canvas, in colours which were varied but which tended towards the yellow end of the spectrum. Many of her room interior paintings show the same room from different angles, or even multiple views from a slightly different or the same angle. In some paintings a door or window is the dominant focus for the painting, while in others the viewer is shown the entire room.
His > knowledge is superficial, his blunders, numerous, his chronology > inconsistent. He labours at portrait-painting, but his portraits are > daubs... The repeitions, redundancies, and slovenliness of expression which > disfigure the work may be partly due to the haste with which (as the author > frequently reminds us) it was written. Some blemishes of style, particularly > the clumsy and involved structure of his sentences, may perhaps be ascribed > to insufficient literary training. The inflated rhetoric, the straining > after effect by means of hyperbole, antithesis and epigram, mark the > degenerate taste of the Silver Age, of which Paterculus is the earliest > example.
" The All About Jazz review by Jack Bowers simply states: " On Restless Spirits, Magris proves he is as proficient writing for a big band as he is for trios or quartets. He and the Big Band Ritmo Sinfonica Citta di Verona have designed an impressive album that is unlike any others you're apt to chance upon." The All About Jazz review by Jerry D’Souza simply states: " Magris uses a wide canvas for his compositions and his palette is rich in its colorful diversity. He daubs it with the stylistic impressionism of funk, ballads, the blues and African rhythms.
Sturtevant's earliest known paintings were made in New York in the late 1950s. In these works, she sliced tubes of paint open, flattened them, and attached them to canvas. Most of these works contain fragments from tubes of several colors of paint, some have additional pencil scribbles and daubs of paint. Sturtevant was close friends with Robert Rauschenberg and Jasper Johns, both of whom own paintings from this period. In 1964, by memorization only, she began to manually reproduce (or "repeat") paintings and objects created by her contemporaries with results that can immediately be identified with an original, at a point that turned the concept of originality on its head.
That's a small quibble with an urgent and impeccably acted film. But it's also the difference between a very good movie and a great one." Manohla Dargis of The New York Times awarded the film an NYT Critic's Pick with a strong acknowledgment of Spielberg as director saying, "Mostly, (the Post decision to publish) went down fast, a pace that Mr. Spielberg conveys with accelerated rhythms, flying feet, racing cameras and an enjoyably loose approach to the material. With his virtuosic, veteran crew, Mr. Spielberg paints the scene vividly and with daubs of beauty; most notably, he creates distinct visual realms for the story's two main overlapping, at times colliding, worlds.
He quickly made a name for himself and, in 1912, had worked his way up to president of United Press. During the First World War, he served as a war correspondent in Europe, and accidentally sent a false report of the Armistice four days before it was actually signed.Days before the end of the First World War, Canadians celebrated in the streets. But it was thanks to fake news, by Katie Daubs, in the Toronto Star; published November 3, 2018; retrieved November 4, 2018 Howard's reputation survived and in 1917 he became a Scripps partner, whose name appeared in one of the Scripps subsidiary companies, the Scripps Howard News Service.
The Sande society daubs objects and people with hojo to indicate that they are under Sande's control and protection and are subject to the full authority of Sande law and punishment. At Sande ceremonies, the pure white of hojo and of the clothes worn by Sande officials is thrown into dramatic contrast with the blackness of sowei masks. The most important participant in the sowei masquerade is the ndoli jowei, "the expert in dancing," the woman who dances in the mask in public and teaches dancing to the girls in the encampment. An important part of initiation into the Sande society is the taking of a new name, which the girl herself usually chooses.
The western trailhead is located along New York State Route 9D in the town of Fishkill, just north of the county line. It is across from the parking lot for the nearby Breakneck Ridge trailhead and the short path to the Breakneck Ridge station, where trains on Metro-North Railroad's Hudson Line stop on weekends, bringing many hikers to the trails in the vicinity. The trail uses yellow as its blaze color, either in the form of rectangular daubs of paint or circular plastic markers. From Route 9D, just above sea level at the nearby Hudson River, the trail begins a gentle climb in a generally north-northeast direction along an old woods road, making a long switchback and then following a wide streambed more directly uphill.
The review said it had some suspenseful and novel twists, but also some "horrific touches (that) seem a bit derivative, such as a Freddy Krueger-like nightmare in which hands pull you through a bed". Kim McDaniel of The Salt Lake Tribune called it "the most sophisticated computer game to date" and "a weird, wild, horrific ride that will make you jump at every turn, even if you aren't normally faint-of-heart". Although McDaniel said it might be easy for experienced players, she appreciated that it was more accessible for casual players than difficult games like The 7th Guest. A Billboard magazine review said Phantasmagoria "lives up to the advanced billing" and "aims to unnerve and succeeds gruesomely with bloody special effects interspliced in trusty scare-flick fashion with daubs of flesh and hints of sex".
Reviewing the EP for Rock Sound, Tim Newbound stated that it was "a wicked slab of bare-bones rock." Malcolm Dowe of Metal Hammer states that they "prove that grunge can be given a fresh twist, bringing in daubs of Velvet Revolver and [Queens of the Stone Age]." Lions later supported Monster Magnet and Karma to Burn on their UK tour in December, making Let No One Fall available for free download to coincide with the tour. Drenik also launched his side project Battleme, contributing the song "Burn This Town" to the second series finale of Sons of Anarchy as well as the series soundtrack Sons of Anarchy: Shelter - EP. He would later, in 2010, contribute a cover of Neil Young's "Hey Hey, My My" for the Sons of Anarchy third series finale and soundtrack Sons of Anarchy: The King is Gone.
That the Moorish tower—that wooden shed with a door in the > centre, and daubs of crimson and yellow all round, like a gigantic watch- > case! That the place where night after night we had beheld the undaunted Mr. > Blackmore make his terrific ascent, surrounded by flames of fire, and peals > of artillery, and where the white garments of Madame Somebody (we forget > even her name now), who nobly devoted her life to the manufacture of > fireworks, had so often been seen fluttering in the wind, as she called up a > red, blue, or party-coloured light to illumine her temple! The Gardens feature in a number of other works of literature. They are the scene of a brief but pivotal turning point in the fortunes of anti-heroine Becky Sharp in Thackeray's 19th-century novel Vanity Fair, as well as a setting in his novel Pendennis.

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