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371 Sentences With "evocative of"

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

It might become something more evocative of the device's purpose.
Roebuck: It was so evocative of that moment in time.
It's all evocative of something you've seen before… but where?
Its title was meant to be evocative of that era.
But Sinclair's move is evocative of something even more ominous.
It is evocative of imagery from a hundred years ago.
It's simultaneously simple and instantly evocative of the food delivery chain.
"It's so evocative of dating in New York," she told me.
Evocative of the woods of Camp Cataract, vegetation dominates the stage.
Emila Medkova shows natural details evocative of human bodies or faces.
Evocative of midcentury modernist homeware, Kalon's versions are elegant but practical.
And, well, heck if these phones aren't evocative of onion and garlic.
In this context, Middleton's sculpture is unnervingly evocative of a torture instrument.
The score opens with a circular piano ostinato evocative of geometric precision.
Opal-crowned manakins wear an iridescent toupee, evocative of a unicorn's mane.
Its tribal-esque exterior is evocative of the island's rich native culture.
How Aloy fights is also evocative of characters made famous by YA fiction.
It's evocative of those arresting-yet-delicate passages from the Valiant Hearts soundtrack.
Town & Country swiftly declared the look evocative of the late, great Audrey Hepburn.
Their parents preferred the saturated yellow of 24-carat gold, evocative of ingots.
From their eyes shot angular beams of green light evocative of film projections.
They created hovercrafts evocative of "Blade Runner" and used them as set dressing.
"It's not shou sugi ban, but it's evocative of it," Mr. Page said.
Evocative of the Olympic rings, other "five" symbolism was featured in the show.
It's an arrangement that many have observed is eerily evocative of indentured labor.
The technique gave the film a slightly grainy look evocative of Saito's work.
It's very evocative of the loops and dives planes do when they AVIATE.
The body language is intense though and very evocative of current events, honestly.
By definition, comfort foods are rich and creamy, or evocative of childhood pleasures.
The album's title is uniquely feminine as well, though more evocative of "bad" femininity.
Although the art is far from representative, it is evocative of its own process.
Video footage taken at the scene is evocative of a bad science fiction film.
But I think again it's more about being evocative of feline behavior or movement.
The glam-rock texture so noticeably evocative of Prince and '70s-era David Bowie.
It's bold and brightly colored, and immediately arresting; evocative of something primal and thrilling.
Yelchin's art, evocative of kookily surreal medieval woodcuts, is perfectly suited to the task.
He played around, creating dances evocative of Pina Bausch, Martha Graham and Ohad Naharin.
The wide spacing of the letters is evocative of the unsettling title sequence for Alien.
Some of the T's in her name are evocative of the New York Times logo.
And some find all the data-harvesting less evocative of the future than of 1984.
"The designer wanted gray — it's supposed to be evocative of San Francisco fog," Schoninger said.
Even "Bright Lights," that most giddily evocative of eighties novels, isn't really a period piece.
But it was equally evocative of Vlambeer's ordeal in bringing the game to completion, as well.
Similarly evocative of male-driven destructiveness is the oil-and-acrylic painting "Before the Revolution" (1979).
A passage on putting America ahead of other countries was evocative of Bannon's own nationalist proclamations.
The first movement opens with a ruminative yet restless violin line, evocative of improvised folk singing.
Open-air music is perhaps the most evocative of all background music, especially in the summer.
But the work, evocative of both a lectern and an altar, is open to multiple readings.
To be sure they are evocative of human anatomy, but they rigorously resist any literal reading.
The headlights and deep hoodscoops are evocative of the Le Mans-winning GT40s of the 1960s.
They are extremely neon but in this blogger's opinion, not exactly evocative of a mountain cat.
A gray and black image made with charcoal on paper, it is evocative of billowing smoke.
The scene is evocative of the Pulse nightclub attack in 2016 in which 49 people were killed.
I far prefer the underground bunker allure of the dusky interior, evocative of both sanctuary and subversion.
She sings in a breathy, tender whisper evocative of virtues like maternal caring and beaming altruistic compassion.
But somehow the term seems timeworn, and not at all evocative of the pleasures of the table.
The other artist in the show whose work seems most evocative of the theme is William Villalongo.
They are recognizable—marginally evocative of Zeppelin's "No Quarter"—and yet arcane, like shimmering afterthoughts or secrets withheld.
It is evocative of the water that surrounds islands on which puzzle platformers are set, bordered with palms.
Its isometric perspective and instantly appealing palette are evocative of Monument Valley, but this isn't a relaxing puzzler.
It has to be as evocative of you and your personality, as Afterlife with Archie really was too.
Finally, in "Elegy II," the heads are set against red and white stripes evocative of the American flag.
With titles like "Shrimp and Gumbo" and "Carnival Day," these recordings were evocative of local New Orleans culture.
The track's centerpiece is a blipping pattern of synth droplets, evocative of vintage Moog compositions by Raymond Scott.
Some felt the dual pink and blue winners from 2016, for example, were too evocative of a nursery.
Evocative of Christmas morning, the parts shot builds anticipation, putting the sheer amount of stuff at the forefront.
The nylon stocking might be evocative of spider webs, but it also resembles the loosened wrappings of a mummy.
Finally, we are wished an intimate adieu from a puppet show tent also evocative of the setting in Petrushka.
Square film is, of course, more evocative of classic Polaroids than the typical credit card-sized rectangular Instax photos.
Often evocative of bacon, bonfires, and/or whisky, it's one of the more divisive genres of beer out there.
""It's…evocative of that certain other situation," Marnie actress Allison Williams tells Vulture, "in very different and noticeable ways.
They've always been evocative of something smooth and blissful, while coercing out of you that restless desire to dance.
Over time, and with a kick from McCarthy, it became less evocative of those who perished there, or why.
"To me, the bass line — which is the canon — is evocative of the universals spheres turning," Mr. Tritle said.
The imagery in its audiovisual component is evocative of VR animations, heavy on references to sci-fi and technology.
That is the name of his firm's whizzy command centre in California, which is evocative of a Pentagon war room.
It is also more evocative of wind, which sweeps around on "blow" for several bars before the rain comes in.
That's where Grease came in, which Richmond built around to create a track that's evocative of Lemonade without copying it.
New designs emphasize common areas both intimate and public at once, evocative of a restaurant dinner or coffee shop meeting.
For me the music conveys a sense of motion and is evocative of the feeling I get in rural spaces.
As much as he documented his surroundings, Morrisroe also recast these recordings as stylized visions evocative of his cultural moment.
It is a most serious work, well written and evocative of an era when the American foreign establishment exuded gravitas.
For some, the green-blue wall tiles, evocative of an ocean floor, may bring out the color in your eyes.
Though at first it seems like an ode to the Dark Side, "The Supremacy" is equally evocative of the light.
For centuries, German breweries have made unfiltered beers, from malt-rich lagers to wheat ales evocative of bananas and cloves.
When they filmed on the Hudson in New York City, the scene was very evocative of the day of the landing.
Evocative of Bosch's painting, the forms are far more abstracted and disjointed than the fantastical scenes of the original nude bodies.
French has always had a genius for developing creepy, evocative settings, and most evocative of all is Hugo's home, Ivy House.
The Legend of Zelda: Breath of the Wild doesn't look remotely real, but it is incredibly evocative of an alternate reality.
Along similar lines, "Peaceful Morning" juxtaposes a banjo and acoustic bass with a raft of vocal harmonies evocative of Vampire Weekend.
"The Black Cathedral," evocative of the Cuban films of Sara Gómez and Humberto Solás, shows the Sacramentalists to be savvy politicians.
It's immediately evocative of the 2010 game's Wild West setting, with a color scheme to match earlier Red Dead Redemption art.
To enhance the theme, I created a sparse, supersymmetric, grid-art layout evocative of the Rutherford-Bohr model of an atom.
Excavating internet-fossilized synth sounds evocative of RollerCoaster Tycoon era video games, the track's voiceover meditates on artificial superintelligence and lattes.
It is in some ways evocative of the well-known "Willie Horton" ad that ran against the 1988 Democratic presidential nominee, Gov.
On Friday evening, a crowd seething with hatred and bigotry conducts a torchlight parade in a manner deliberately evocative of Nazi theater.
A 1960 photograph of a teenage boy posing in a pool hall is more directly evocative of the time it was made.
The pushers are a little stumpy for my taste but they are evocative of some early Seiko chronos, so I'll allow it.
As the plane flies through a blaze, the cabin fills with the smell of smoke evocative of a barbecue or a campfire.
Mr. Andres's "Checkered Shade" begins with churning figures evocative of Minimalism, though the rippling repetitions go through long, discursive stretches and developments.
"If a label is evocative of Italy, but the oil is not Italian, I can slap on a fine," Mr. Vaccari said.
This town isn't just evocative of Sweetwater; it actually is Sweetwater, just transposed from the Old West and into Japan's Edo period.
Chura's vocals are evocative of artists like Liz Phair, Amiee Mann, or Alanis Morissette (who is Chura's favorite to sing karaoke to).
Webb sat on the bench and began to play a rolling, majestic tune, evocative of his hits but unplaceable in the canon.
Each starkly black and white image appears stately and evocative of the story behind the person to whom each bodily feature belongs.
Shots of waves crashing and Caruana wandering accompany a track evocative of timeless alt-rock ala Weezer, and rife with bittersweet lyrics.
We'll find works by both Thomas and emerging and established artists of color in a constructed domestic interior evocative of the period.
In December, Prada also withdrew several items evocative of racist caricatures, including a keychain of black monkey faces with exaggerated red lips.
In total, the computer analyzed more than 15 million social-media posts, looking at hashtags like #beachlife, #lovetotravel, and others evocative of vacationing.
With persistent looking, the eye is drawn into a kaleidoscopic space made up of small interlocking elements evocative of machinery and/or sex.
He walks purposefully to meet Gambi (James Remar), his Alfred, accompanied by music almost blatantly evocative of the Christopher Nolan's Dark Knight movies.
Others are more subjective: giving the algorithm data about which works are concerned with religious themes, evocative of memory, or laced with humor.
This, combined with his youthful pitch (evocative of Mr Macron or Justin Trudeau) has allowed him to reach new voters in metropolitan Germany.
The result was part Emma Stone and Ryan Gosling, part Ellen and Corey — and every bit as evocative of Old Hollywood as intended.
The real test of the Range Rover, to be honest and evocative of my favorite Roxy Music album, is to explore country life.
That stark image of McCandless flying free in space is evocative of so many of the things that capture the imagination about spaceflight.
There is possibly no flavor more evocative of American childhood than the chalky, subtly sweet taste of those horseshoe and clover-shaped marshmallows.
It's evocative of Google's Cardboard, a simple $15 headset with a cardboard casing and VR goggles for people to use with their smartphones.
They fill a white-walled maze pleasantly evocative of the bright, visually weightless spaces all members of this group have completed since 20123.
Is it the tune most evocative of lightning-strike summer flings, such as Calvin Harris and Rihanna's "This Is What You Came For"?
This topper by AMI is evocative of old-school tailoring, but its relaxed shape and soft houndstooth wool give it a younger twist.
For many, camps are evocative of a childhood they are nostalgic for, allowing them to relive the more innocent times of their youth.
The new collection, modeled by the conceptual artist Laila Gohar, features glass in organic shapes, with rippled surfaces evocative of silt or water.
Most of them are highly angular, but this one has a gently curved surface that is evocative of a sculpture by Henry Moore.
"It's a simple, powerful work, evocative of language and poetry," Gérard Azoulay, the director of the Space Observatory, said by email in French.
The revival, on the big screens at the Convention hall, of the Clinton family's political "narrative" was at times exhausting, evocative of Argentina.
While asking the poems to consistently retain Plath's metaphorical quality is perhaps too much, Malech's anagrams remain impressively coherent and evocative of Plath.
There's a rickety, plastic quality to the music exactly suited to the occasion, evocative of old toy stores and elaborately crafted gingerbread sculptures.
Evocative of Casa Mauaad's illicit past, the space is lit in red and its hidden entryway recalls a time of speakeasies and burlesque.
Some Native Americans consider the Redskins name highly offensive and evocative of the genocide of North American tribes by American settlers of European descent.
Sludgy percussion movements meanwhile get pulled apart like meat from the bone, egged on by a gut-punching bassline evocative of Norwegian black metal.
Surely there is nothing more evocative of Arsenal in the modern era than a scoreboard which reads: "Watford 2-1 Arsenal, Cleverley 90+2".
One spindly, the other evocative of a flowering human heart, they're connected by way of wires that feed into the tanks and become tentacles.
Through the track, she shows off a strong vocal side as she coasts cooly along an ambient melody, evocative of 90s style R&B.
What image could be more evocative of freedom than that of wild horses, galloping over the plains, their manes elegantly flowing in the breeze?
The trio "For Harold Budd" is anchored by an achingly expressive modal melody for flute, evocative of bamboo-flute music in the Hindustani tradition.
"Eliminate your dad," sung Cabello, turning original lyric "might seduce your dad type" into something more evocative of professional hitmen than typical bad guys.
The book-matched French walnut paneling is glossier and more radiant, the patterns in the grain more evocative of monumental abstract paintings, than before.
It was in Starkey's studio — where she creates arrangements evocative of Flemish oil paintings — that Jamieson began to build an encyclopedic knowledge of plants.
Finn kicked off the generation of this theme by finding the phrase BASELINE VASELINE, which we all thought was evocative of some umpish impishness.
However, with the hat, Trump's outfit might have tipped the scales, moving from a practical accessory dangerously close to costume territory evocative of colonialists.
He made versions in pinwale corduroy with high-waist Urkel trousers and also in wool flannel and goofy muted plaids distinctly evocative of Goodwill.
Cut out along the edges into forms evocative of Kara Walker's silhouettes, Whyte's drawing depicts a flailing man in a thrum of faceless people.
She placed internment camps behind him, cherry blossoms around him, and filled the surrounding Google letters with stripes and colors evocative of the American flag.
This spring show is particularly evocative of Los Angeles (hint: "smog") and will exhibit works by John Baldessari, Mike Kelley, Barbara Kruger, and Ed Ruscha.
The clip is evocative of '60s European art house cinema, depicting a photoshoot of a romantically involved man and woman in an uneasy domestic scene.
The 184 is evocative of a future we've always dreamed of and is primed to alter the very fundamentals of the way we get around.
Like many brands, including Dove, Pantene and Always, the Ivanka Trump clothing line uses a marketing slogan evocative of girl power, the somewhat nebulous #womenwhowork.
The models walk out to a mash-up of reggae and '80s punk rock evocative of London's pirate radio stations, and the atmosphere is charged.
One is filled with those who remember Rubik's Cube as a pop-culture relic, as evocative of the 1980s as leg warmers and Duran Duran.
It is a stance evocative of Annie Oakley, the sharpshooting protofeminist 19th-century rodeo queen whose image is tattooed across the whole of TJ's back.
Underneath that hood and noose, so evocative of the Ku Klux Klan, was a black cop and survivor of the Tulsa Race Massacre, Will Reeves.
Backstage Beauty Report The beauty look at Oscar de la Renta's fall/winter 2016 show today was evocative of Edwardian beauties — with a touch of coquettishness.
Some designs, by way of their ubiquity, have the unusual quality of being at times invisible and at others powerfully evocative of a time or place.
The quality of the light from the lamp was not great, but the golden tone was evocative of the journey I was about to embark on.
For this specific video, he wanted to use these images of water and ice, things that were evocative of Norse exploration but without being too literal.
For all the wild stories about how bands got their names, Fonarow says that some artists do try to pick a name evocative of the music.
But in springtime, the island proves a haven for travelers seeking holistic relaxation, an oasis of flowering almond trees and red dirt hills evocative of Tuscany.
It is also evocative of a cultural shift: Now people can be a part of many fan communities, even seemingly divergent ones, and be taken seriously.
Human rights ideology and neoliberalism were not twins, Moyn says, but both fostered a perception that social justice was passé or, worse, evocative of awful regimes.
" By describing "women exclusively in terms of traditionally subordinate roles in families," Stanley claims, Romney employs "language evocative of that used in the Hutu Ten Commandments.
Of the '23s shows I've seen in the past few years, this one is the best, evocative of its time, and in sync with the present.
The incident, more evocative of 18th-century gunboat diplomacy than modern relations between liberal democracies, played out at the height of the "cod wars" over fishing rights.
"Zain" is after Huma's late father, and "Jordan" is "evocative of the river that is important to both of our cultures," Weiner explained to PEOPLE in 2012.
It was stunning, so evocative of real life in the rural places in the South and West that I couldn't, for a moment, think of anything else.
Dolce and Gabbana, the luxury Italian fashion house, wants you to wear stripes this season for "an urban summer look" evocative of a '60s or '70s silhouette.
Often Maar seems more interested in creating a beguiling atmosphere evocative of drowsing in bed with a hangover than in cultivating either playful or socially alert observations.
Evocative of Avenue Foch or Park Avenue in the 1970s, watered-down versions of their oddly uptight offerings are being embraced by women intent on sidestepping trends.
The immediate legibility of images like those of Evans cannot be separated from the way their dynamism, evocative of ancient painting and sculpture, honors the black body.
Spurred forward by a skipping breakbeat evocative of vintage jungle, the track evokes a loosely-wired machine slowly melting away its own plastic casing into a puddle.
We're tempted to call it liturgical techno, consisting as it does of ethereal organ runs and shuffling chord patterns evocative of classical compositions from the Baroque period.
Where the original is a melancholy, slightly exhausted celebration of non-stop partying—evocative of a pleasantly numb hangover—this remix sounds decidedly like a bad trip.
None of the wines were heavy, but all were lasting, evocative of their place and superb with one of my favorite dishes, bigoli with tuna, anchovies and sage.
The sounds of nature, from chirping jungle birds to the surging currents of the river, are effectively captured in Mr. Catán's orchestral writing, evocative of Debussy and Stravinsky.
Nor do I want to damn this film, so richly evocative of South Florida that it raises the humidity in the theater, with the faint praise of universalism.
There are passages in Rzewski's long piano piece, based on the song, where the plaintive melody is enshrouded in clusters evocative of Ives, or in dreamy jazzy harmonies.
Rodin's work has long existed as a statement on what figurative sculpture is supposed to look like: stridently evocative of human expression and greatness, agonized, and seemingly immortal.
Climax moment: The "it's not funny" breakdown that launches at 1:08 is tremendous and somewhat evocative of a bad-trip version of the DJ battle from Juice.
The single is a firm departure from the producer's club-oriented sounds of recent years, working at a much lower tempo in a hazy style evocative of trip-hop.
Many of IBM's African problem designations are evocative of the development field— the decades-long aid-agency and NGO driven campaign to solve Africa's long-standing socio-economic issues.
While Majendie's installation is intimate and evocative of individual characters, Vezjak's is grand and formal, neatly inserting itself in the canon of government-funded memorials: stony, stark, and austere.
That sort of strategy advocates for targeting kids and young adults with anti-drug messaging, evocative of the "Just Say No" ad campaign of the 1980s and early 1990s.
The building is still under construction, visible today as a large white frame with an undulating roof that is evocative of both an airplane wing and a circus tent.
Wang says that it's evocative of the Great Recession of 2008 and 2009, which set off a similar wave of M&A, notably Oracle's 2009 purchase of Sun Microsystems.
In Ranjani Shettar's installation "Seven Ponds and a Few Raindrops," looping, delicate steel forms covered in tamarind-stained muslin sway ominously in midair, evocative of parched flora or exoskeletons.
As the family becomes a culturally loaded symbol, evocative of everything and used to justify anything, it becomes harder to devise real policies that address real needs, he said.
Though politically they differ greatly, the memes that affectionately mock Saied are evocative of the fandom that developed around the Labour leader Jeremy Corbyn among young people in Britain.
The Iraqi-born artist Hassan Massoudy, who is based in Paris, draws on his classical training in calligraphy to create vibrantly colored oversized letters evocative of traditional Arabic script.
Yet aside from a jaunty World War I-themed "Follies" number, in the second act, Lynne Page's choreography is less evocative of vintage vaudeville spectacle than of streamlined dinner theater.
"The Rude Screen," a play on the traditional church rood screen, is a discarded billowing blue fabric hanging abandoned on a branch, the blue evocative of so many Virgin paintings.
In the early 1950s, Guston was one of the most influential abstract expressionists, delivering tightly composed webs of often pink or red brushstrokes that some critics thought evocative of Monet.
But the controversy and outrage is also being amplified by anti-women gamers and is evocative of the vitriolic sexist abuse that many women on the platforms are subjected to.
The shape is evocative of the ankle-grazing, column-style qipaos, though the off-the-shoulder ruffle calls to mind printed Carribean dresses, or certain West African Aso Ebi frocks.
I could live without Asus' signature concentric circle design, which the company calls "classic," but I find evocative of some of the less successful models in its mobile PC range.
Mia's panic at the precipice of her change is evocative of trans preteens who want to start hormone regimens before they undergo puberty and face irrevocable changes to their bodies.
There are quite a few of the preludes, often in the minor keys, where the singing aspect of the string instruments is really evocative of the emotion within the music.
The other is whether its battle scene, strongly evocative of those in Homer's "Iliad" and "Odyssey," depicts an event that contributed to the oral tradition behind the works of Homer.
Most of the men wore their hair buzzed close on the sides and long and floppy on top, separated by a severe side parting that seemed unmistakably evocative of Hitler's.
In Britain, the film is evocative of the sectarian violence that afflicted Northern Ireland in the 19913s; some of the death scenes were said to be based on police records.
The show is in many ways evocative of Brave New World, whose central message is that tyranny can take hold and even be accepted if people are entertained and distracted enough.
Where he got the information is uncertain, but Szyttia tells a most remarkable, dulcet tale, one that seems more evocative of the Yiddish author Sholom Aleichem than of a postwar Parisian.
H.S. Philip Montgomery's images on the opioid crisis in Ohio have been rightly praised — the photos are intimate and evocative of the sadness and banal grief of a generation in suffering.
The combination of the strong howl evocative of a wolf or a strong wind with the fragile, floating imagery is engaging, particularly given the acoustic properties of the stone sacristy setting.
In April, she appeared at Star Wars Celebration to pay tribute to Fisher, which she did and then some, delivering a heartfelt speech in a white dress evocative of Leia Organa.
The appeal rests on something that's hard to put your finger on; something weird and abstract and evocative of the way we now balance our lives and personalities online and off.
Born in Ethiopia, Ms. Jernberg wove a keening Ethiopian folk song into her own assemblage of virtuosic vocal tricks: yelps, croaks and hums evocative of birds and of early Meredith Monk.
While its instrumentation is evocative of club music, stylistically it situates itself a little less conclusively; it's consistently caught in medias res in a multiplicity of oddly conjoined timbres and moods.
Olson's illustrations are evocative of comic books from the 40s and 50s — bold, high contrast, primarily black and white drawings of beautiful, if not slightly absurd, characters in states of peril.
But that perfect patina is stripped away almost immediately in a setup evocative of Rick Moody's "The Ice Storm," ultimately showcasing the horrors that wealth and boredom and sadness can produce.
Historians, however, warned the Post that such a parade may be less evocative of American patriotism and more aligned with totalitarian or nationalist regimes like North Korea and the Soviet Union.
Parked outside the building's hexagonal ziggurat, evocative of a Star of David, is a Deutsche Reichsbahn railway car, one of 120,000 built between 1910 and 1927, to haul freight and cattle.
There are brightly colored "naïve" figures of people and animals familiar to European folk textiles, but also florals evocative of Persian textiles, abstract geometrics and heraldic symbols that feel distinctly Byzantine.
Musicians from a youth rock camp belted out a cover of "Purple Haze," the first tune in a daylong Hendrix soundtrack, from underneath a red sculpture evocative of a butterfly wing.
As they retreated, they left behind a demolished reception building, evocative of the 1979 hostage-taking at the US Embassy in Tehran, which likely ruined Jimmy Carter's chance at re-election.
A shade of blue evocative of Microsoft Windows, the monochrome rectangle, surrounded by a welter of words and images competing for my attention, stood out for its soothing and unassuming homogeneity.
The logo was trending on social media Friday for all the wrong reasons, as Twitter users ridiculed the symbol for being sexually suggestive – or at the very least, evocative of toilet paper.
Inspired by the Neo-Impressionism, his early Paris paintings include leering portraits of hookers and pimps, like "The Guy" (21923), evocative of a Henri Toulouse-Lautrec painting, but with a looser luminosity.
Like last year, when there was a small screening of Fisher Stevens' 2016 documentary Before the Flood — a title evocative of the flood of the Old Testament — at Baylor University in Texas.
Following the Iggy Pop-featuring lead single, "Leaving The Park" sees 0PN return to his instrumental roots, conjuring a digital swarm of tense synths evocative of cyberpunk, new age, and prog styles.
While the piano melody loop that introduces the track initially sets a melancholy mood, the tone urgently shifts when more harmonic components are introduced, evocative of a process of heated emotional transformation.
The ultra-colorful glazes on Kley's stools and planters remind me of campy talavera homeware and Dalí's foray into ceramics, while her painted trompe-l'œil walls are evocative of palazzos at night.
Interestingly, the soundscapes tend to adopt some of their paintings' visual properties, with certain noises evocative of the texture of paint, the gestural strokes of the artists, and even the subject matter.
It might have seemed a wild departure to turn from this formidable partita to Schumann's "Papillons," an early, playful suite evocative of a masked ball, full of fanciful dances and quirky bits.
It includes BDSM gear, suggestive food imagery, and even a lucha libre wrestling mask, and closes out with a group shot evocative of Leonardo da Vinci's famous depiction of The Last Supper.
His work is deeply evocative of Indian history and culture, drawing on the grandeur of shrines and temples, the bustle of city streets and the local materials from his grandfather's furniture workshop.
But like all great true crime, "The Last Stone" finds its power not by leaning into cliché but by resisting it — pushing for something more realistic, more evocative of a deeper truth.
To fill an awkward spot in the living room, he built a low-slung kidney-shaped sofa, evocative of a 1970s-era swimming pool, and now fitted with a natural linen slipcover.
The farmhouse look is in, and most have obtrusive pieces of wood running between their legs that, while evocative of 699.573th-century Shaker design, make it near impossible to sit underneath comfortably.
His cover illustration captures the tone of the game perfectly—the original 80s art for the game was always evocative of Sylvester Stallone and Arnold Schwarzenegger in their Rambo and Predator prime, respectively.
The middle is a slate-gray band covered in off-white curves evocative of churning waves, and beneath them, smeared black forms poke their heads up from the bottom edge like stylized snakes.
Advertise on Hyperallergic with Nectar Ads Peter Brook and Marie-Hélène Estienne's The Prisoner at Theatre for a New Audience in Brooklyn is a tale of incest and punishment evocative of Greek tragedy.
Evocative of Lenin's strategic teachings, left-wing groups like the one that stormed the Heritage Foundation see themselves as a revolutionary vanguard, possessed of a special consciousness of the interconnected problems facing society.
My Burberry Black eau de parfum From: Burberry Aroma: Sweet, Youthful Evocative of a London garden at dusk, this overtly romantic scent balances sweet jasmine and candied rose with warm amber and patchouli.
The ending of the episode comes full circle and is evocative of the first scene, the black and white movie in which a corrupt sheriff was caught around the neck with a rope.
Most of them featured experiments with sculptural concrete, each more dazzling than the next; more evocative of the Sydney Opera House or J.F.K.'s TWA Terminal than the Rubik's cubes of Lincoln Center.
The light-filled gallery space is a maze of masterfully crafted centerpieces evocative of purposeless furniture cluttered with found objects, which, despite appearing like kinetic Japanese calligraphy, are static amalgamations of collected knowledge.
Surprising shareholders with grander merger and acquisition plans during a touchy acquisition of Sky, which faltered once before, and scandals at its all-important Fox News operation is evocative of another era, however.
Shot in 35 millimeter in glamorous black and white, and accompanied by a sweeping score, the movie is deeply evocative of "Manhattan," making it feel like a Woody Allen movie about Woody Allen.
They have been leitmotifs ever since — the fall 2012 collection, Lust Never Sleeps, featured more bondage masks, made from a tan leather and tweed, evocative of a British dandy — half respectable, half subversive.
Among the most distinctive of our native gulls, the laughing gull is well named; its rollicking call is as evocative of the summer beach season as the smell of Coppertone and salt air.
The project was inspired by a similar initiative in Afghanistan, in which families were invited to work on a memory box; participants in Lebanon felt that a box was too evocative of a coffin.
What Bearden does differently is that he incorporates materials and mark-making to evoke another layer to these scenes — they become images not just of these environments, but also evocative of the original scenes.
Its sound is particularly evocative of the early 19703s, when Marvin Gaye, Curtis Mayfield and Stevie Wonder were composing their own epics and jazz musicians like Max Roach were playing spirituals with gospel choirs.
And they're wonderful today, immediately evocative of the horizons they were designed to accompany—unless, that is, you've the misfortune to stumble across some no-name dance producer's absolute butchering of its main theme.
The two-dimensional works are lightly sentimental, but the intervention of Edwards's sculptures evokes the sense of binding and thereby is further evocative of how freedom looks to someone who has been literally fettered.
MEXICO CITY (Reuters) - U.S. Republican presidential front-runner Donald Trump's political rhetoric is "racist," and evocative of Adolf Hitler, former Mexican President Felipe Calderon told reporters at an event in Mexico City on Saturday.
Its intricately rendered images are less evocative of airy, pastel dreams than of the brooding, waking nightmares that descend upon city dwellers when the world they inhabit threatens to close in and bury them.
This five-DVD set has 101 restored cartoons, made between 1935 and 1943, some evocative of no-longer-acceptable attitudes, and thus a gift that may be better suited to social historians than kids.
That fell flat; it was too evocative of advertisements for medication that show patients relaxing on the beach, as though their everyday life would suddenly be replaced by an eternal vacation in San Diego.
It is evocative of Fauvism, in its bright, expressive color and portrayal of women with parasols in early 20th century dress, out for a walk in the park, and hangs at 96 inches tall.
Kaiser's forms are evocative of shapes found in the paintings of František Kupka and Arthur Dove; the designs and architecture of Peter Behrens; and the gothic futurist sets of Fritz Lang's film, Metropolis (1927).
"We had all these ideas of what we wanted," recounts Jennifer Ledbury, an art director at The Times, including Gothic-style serif fonts that were evocative of the castles-and-dragons aesthetic of Thrones.
A particularly impressive piece is the "Two Spherical Clocks" (before 1688) comprised of two brass weighted spheres balanced by an arm representing the hand of God and evocative of the crown and divine motifs.
The brassy opening beats began as Beyoncé crouched on the roof of a police car, wearing a red-and-white blouse and a matching skirt: evocative of the rural South but made by Gucci.
In a recent video interview, he sounded almost irreverent about his homeland's towering composer — especially about the notion, still widely held, that the symphonies are evocative of Finnish folk music and depictions of nature.
The bar will be lit with neon spelling out "Good Times, Bad Times" — a homage to Led Zeppelin but also evocative of the ups and downs of Lower Manhattan over the last half-century.
Trained as an actor, Ellis reveals that pedigree in wry winks to Shakespeare (the butcher's name is Titus) and dramatis personae evocative of commedia dell'arte (a foppish suitor, a predatory doctor, a dashing lover).
It is simultaneously evocative of choral music and 70s experimental German rock, and the spacious, light and shadow-focused art direction in the Four/Ten Media–produced video evocatively brings the work to life spatially.
Edging through space with a tantalizing, barely-perceptible slow modulation, Phoebé Guillemot's work here speaks to a kind of vibrant earthiness—evocative of dirt, moss, and rocks tumbling over one another at their own pace.
Since February, the front section of its manufacturing facility has been transformed into a boutique that's evocative of a high-end art gallery, with hanging oak display cases backed with slabs of hot-rolled steel.
Perhaps that is because in so many respects it is evocative of both (Rise of the) Tomb Raider and The Witcher 3—two of my most-loved big games from the past couple of years.
Lord RAJA, today shares a full stream of his simmering new Amadeus EP. The record is forthcoming on Ghostly International, and it has a distinctly troubled air to it, equally evocative of agitation and melancholy.
There's plenty of thoughtful research available to make the argument that the word is not offensive (unlike so many of the terms evocative of Native Americans that we use for sports teams, but I digress).
"American Beauty" (1985), a still life with a mood and tonality evocative of Robert Frank, includes a portion of an American flag, a bottle of nail polish, and a human foot stepping onto a pedestal.
Though they work in an eclectic range of media, each of these artists refrains from full resolution, inhabiting a liminal space in which advantageous shifts — evocative of romance, finance, and other fortuitous developments — are activated.
It has been increasingly evident, however, that the friction goes beyond the BBC's business model and extends to its journalism, as the prime minister delivers broadsides — evocative of President Trump's media criticism — against the broadcaster.
Smell is the most evocative of the senses, which is why sniffing something like Ombre Nomade, the first unisex scent from Louis Vuitton, is like a mental escape hatch, instantly transporting you to finer locales.
When it was built, the steel and concrete, gull-wing-shaped structure designed by the Finnish architect Eero Saarinen was so evocative of flight, the mere sight of it was supposed to initiate the journey.
Roller Champions leaked shortly before E3 began, and here, it looks more or less like what we expected: a colorful game with a cartoonish style evocative of Fortnite, full of cool-looking stunts and custom outfits.
"O Sagrado é Amor" (2017) is a tree-like structure whose crocheted branches, suspended from its trunk in teardrop shapes evocative of his polyamide sculptures, are filled with bundles of clove, bay leaves, and therapeutic crystals.
"My attempts to create art that was evocative of something spiritual, transcendental, and deeply inspired by mythology, were not viewed as what many of my peers would call, 'high art,' and it wasn't respected," she says.
Yooka-Laylee is an unashamed love letter to platforming's past, appropriately evocative of the Banjo-Kazooie era given its makers, Playtonic, count a lot of the people who put that N64 keeper together amongst their staffers.
Trump's invocation of debt as a justification for austerity is oddly evocative of the fiscal crisis that gripped New York City more than 40 years ago, a moment that seems to have shaped his thinking deeply.
Visiting the pavilion in Venice, Thorpe was particularly struck by the scent design (created by the Sydney-based parfumier Elise Pioch with the artist duo Lyn & Tony), which he found powerfully evocative of outdoor Australian pools.
In this teeming, vividly orchestrated symphony, Bernstein boldly draws from diverse styles, including episodes of wide-spaced, poignant harmonies evocative of Copland, and hurtling moments that screech with modernist intensity and break into 12-tone shards.
Last year it was Marc Chagall's work that led Selby to replant parts of its gardens with salvia and date palms, evocative of the south of France where the artist did some of his loveliest work.
This new dashboard is evocative of a series of special reports by the United States State Department that in the 1980s sought to undermine Soviet fake news by exposing Moscow's attempts to influence the American public.
Plenty of callbacks to Aliens are inserted into the gameplay, including a loader fight, flambéing eggs, and a frantic APC escape; and the music's bombastic blasts and eerie turns are deliberately evocative of James Horner's original score.
The only album coming out on 4/20 that could be called seasonally appropriate was the new A Perfect Circle, and the stoner mystique surrounding Maynard is often too evocative of the incense rack at Spencer's Gifts.
At any minute, this humongous sky might smash you with hail or whirl you away in a tornado or bless you with rainbows and cloud-piercing sunbeams evocative of celestial choirs and the angels ascending and descending.
A large speakerphone is set in an oblong back that feels good in the hands, and despite being plastic, the phone is coated in a durable coating evocative of the high-quality paint found on DSLR cameras.
Built around a shifting tide of breathy, spectral hiss evocative of certain dark ambient sounds, "Aurel Afrek"'s 4/4 pulse is agitated by fidgeting rimshots while magnetically pulled along by a tip-toeing electric piano figure.
Legowelt seems to channel some of the mythological ethos the title implies by creating a sense of hectic rapture, where the synths swirl in winding figures evocative of the euphoric natural gas experts say influenced the oracle.
It comes with a pop-up theater set by Michaël Cailloux evocative of a wondrous odyssey across three continents, as well as boxes containing candied lemon, chocolate sauce and a spice powder — the three wise men's gifts.
The brand also offers minimalist silk and linen slips made from fabric ethically sourced from Los Angeles, but it's the crisp organic cotton creations, evocative of traditional men's shirting, that are best suited for working from home.
But, more evocative of last season's 21-255 campaign were the futile performances along the offensive line, crucial turnovers and missed opportunities that marred Shurmur's debut and led to a 275-210 defeat against the Jacksonville Jaguars.
But, more evocative of last season's 3-13 campaign were the futile performances along the offensive line, crucial turnovers and missed opportunities that marred Shurmur's debut and led to a 20-176 defeat against the Jacksonville Jaguars.
Using a palette evocative of both 1950s Hollywood melodrama and 1970s Italian horror, Ms. Biller (who served as the film's production designer, as well as its writer, producer and director) revels in the ambiguities of Elaine's situation.
While lower fares on some routes may be appreciated by budget-conscious fliers, "Flying under this new fare strata model is evocative of what life must have been like on the Titanic," said George Hobica, founder of Airfarewatchdog.com.
"Fading Frontier," the band's seventh studio album, released last fall, is a strange, brilliant meditation on perseverance through adversity and an ode to Mr. Cox's many tuneful obsessions — and it's fully evocative of his eccentric stage prattle, too.
Starting with a ballroom-esque vocal sample and becoming animated with a skittering keyboard line evocative of early-aughts Top 40 hip-hop, the track turns into a playground for testing out thrilling series of complex rhythmic interplay.
Maybe "stress" is an overbearing, over-doing-it word that we never replaced in time for the revolution with something less evocative of a troubled architect on a television dramedy rubbing the loose pink skin of his temples.
At the Cleveland Museum of Art Mr. de Azambuja, who was born in Pôrto Alegre, Brazil, and works in Madrid, uses industrial steel clamps and construction materials in their raw form to build sculptures evocative of Brutalist architecture.
The gas street lamps illuminating Hong Kong's nostalgic Duddell Street are a local landmark, drawing couples who don their wedding day best for pictures that are more evocative of an old London street than modern-day Hong Kong.
In 2008, the European Court of Justice decided that even in translation, "Parmesan" was so evocative of the hard cheese, known in Italy as Parmigiano-Reggiano, that it would not allow cheese made elsewhere to be labeled Parmesan.
Viewers should stick around through the end credits, which feature moody painted scenes evocative of comic books or the covers of pulp novels (rather than the film serials that inspired George Lucas to make the original "Star Wars").
Ultimately the goal for both Hugh and I was to do something very different, something more humanist, something more naturalistic and something more evocative of a genre which has inspired me for a long time: the American western.
The name, alone, is an instant win: evocative of escape, of holidaying, and capable of stirring a little nostalgia, too, with its clear Super Mario Sunshine references—the airport's on an island, reminiscent of the Isle Delfino setting.
Trent Reznor's music has often been evocative of Bowie's darker moments, but he made that connection literal in 1995, with a Nine Inch Nails/David Bowie co-headlining tour and this series of remixes from Further Down the Spiral.
Everyone knows Agnes Denes for her amazing public art project "Wheatfield, A Confrontation" (1982), but there's an intimate scale and methodical process to much of her other work that is more evocative of a mathematician than an urban farmer.
Trump's strategy of cutting off opioids before someone takes them appears to advocate for more targeting of kids and young adults with anti-drug messaging, evocative of the "Just Say No" ad campaign of the 1980s and early 1990s.
Slvrlake's pieces are made from a high-quality Italian denim and manufactured in Los Angeles; there are a variety of styles (including new cuts and washes for fall), evocative of vintage Levi's but slightly updated, along with denim jackets.
Designer Christian Bird says the handsome implements borrow their angles from ancient flint tools, so it's fitting that he also created a gorgeous sculpture-cum-knife block evocative of a boulder to keep up to 11 blades on free-floating display.
Shaw doesn't do figurative painting, so these empty woodland scenes, deliberately evocative of the generic classical landscapes employed as theatre-like backdrop throughout the collection, are unpopulated, emphasizing this link; Shaw's contemporary stage for framing his argument as it were.
When Bill Murray shows up as the bear Baloo, or Garry Shandling, in his final role as the shuffling, muttering porcupine Ikki, their voices are so evocative of familiar faces that they detract from the faces that are actually onscreen.
The book is, however, evocative of the incredible hardship Americans endured during the Depression, and it strikes deep emotional chords: Before the first third of the story is over, the hero, Joe Rantz, has been abandoned by his family three times.
These quieter places on Twitch are more evocative of a slower form of entertainment, not unlike Norway's slow TV, which broadcasts long train rides or a 2000-hour knitting marathon, and the holiday tradition of watching a yule log burn.
The formal repetition of shapes cast into and out of stark white plaster is so evocative of ancient art forms, like cuneiform tablets or hieroglyphic wall carvings, that, from a small distance, they translate easily into an abstract visual language.
Ms. Walker's contribution will be at Algiers Point, where a ferry will take visitors to an installation she created for a riverboat calliope — a pipe organ evocative of old circuses and steamboats — with the MacArthur-winning jazz pianist Jason Moran.
So she decided to design her own small collection of cashmere sweaters — her first foray into making clothes — evocative of old Jil Sander styles that she and her friends would buy at the Burlington Arcade in London in the mid-1990s.
Though some of the sets are a little too evocative of Mr Anderson's style—a phrase which here means "resembling colourful dolls' houses"—most capture the shadowy drabness of Brett Helquist's illustrations (and a few of his drawings are mimicked on screen).
"Jenna and Mackenzie" is a hazily romantic (and questionably sober) vision of a night out, while "TM in the Meat Rack" is evocative of a Wakefield Poole film: a queer figure suspended in borderless space slowly materializing into the shape of pure desire.
Tatiana Trouvé, for example, draws in copper in two ways: once on paper, in a collage of studies sketched between 2012 and 2015, and again in "I tempi doppi," 2014, with continuous loops of copper wire evocative of lines scribbled into space.
Though this might be the first mixed reality experience of such a nature, 1RIC's project is immediately evocative of Martha Rosler's Bringing the War Home , a series of collaged images of Vietnam War scenes placed within opulent home interiors culled from advertisements.
Beginning with a '0' that is splintered into geometric 3D sections as if it were a NASA architectural blueprint, the numbers slowly become more corporeal and evocative of typographical styles from the 70s and 80s by the time '8' and '9' roll around.
Yesterday, Bank of America and Delta Airlines ended their sponsorship agreements with the Public Theater over its current Shakespeare in the Park production of Julius Caesar, in which the Roman emperor is portrayed as a power-hungry president evocative of Donald Trump.
The work "(discarded objects) for Disposed to Add" (2017) — by turns evocative of umbilical cords, industrial hoses, intestinal canals, and a den of snakes — is by Jes Fan, one of eight artists featured in a group exhibition curated by artist Doreen Garner.
"Nobody had expected her to be so sullenly beautiful," says Eatwell, who speculates that Short's striking beauty — which inspired the infatuated press to call her "The Black Dahlia" ("evocative of an exotic flower, of desire both toxic and intoxicating") — prompted her enduring legend.
In a process mildly evocative of the American Idol TV singing competition, the 20 poets in the making paced on a wooden stage at The New School, a university, wringing their hands with nerves at a rehearsal for the semi-final this month.
I only recently discovered, and absolutely loved, "The Living Mountain," by the Scottish mountaineer and poet Nan Shepherd — part memoir, part field notebook, part lyrical meditation on nature and our relationship with it, evocative of Rachel Carson and Henry Beston and John Muir.
The resplendent mélange of seated tin men — all evocative of that famous one from Oz — displays a frantic, cybernetic logic in terms of the painting's visual tactility, with once lumpen and deadlocked male forms set flowing in jerks and spasms across the surface.
I have for a long time loved the Italian Futurists, particularly Balla, who made several paintings that looked liked swirling squalls of hurly-burly, and this constant activity certainly feels like a foundational feature of modern life, evocative of the way we live now.
One video, The Scoring Society looks at how "scoring is applied to our lives, from Credit Scoring to Social Media scoring and terrorist Scoring," and is strangely evocative of that Black Mirror episode where a girl's life is ruined because of her low personality score.
Like the soundtrack to a government film about interplanetary travel released in 1974, songs like their infinitely infectious "Ran Ran Run" and the laid-back flow of "Wiserway" are equal parts psychedelically transportive and evocative of the 21st century Brooklyn where they were written.
As for the underperformance of the S&P 500 technology sector — it sold off on Friday and has now shed $529 billion in 2016 — Emanuel said that is more evocative of the latter stages of a correction than the start of a bear market.
Trump also defended his daughter, Ivanka, after it emerged earlier this week that she had used a private email account to discuss or relay official White House business, a practice evocative of the one for which Trump harshly criticized Hillary Clinton during the 2016 campaign.
Aided by a team of artisans, she paints, embroiders and glazes the surfaces with asymmetrical half-faces and brightly colored wavy lines that are evocative of the white porcelain plates that Grant painted for the workshops, on which smudgy abstractions seem to twitch with joy.
A morality play in which the forces of good and evil vie for a dying woman's soul, "The Blood of Jesus" is alternately suggestive of Robert Bresson's transcendental cinema and Robert Johnson's supernatural blues — changes in register evocative of Williams's expansive show business sensibility.
He founded a new party, the National Regeneration Movement, or MORENA , which Duncan Wood, the director of the Mexico Institute at the Wilson Center, described as evocative of the early PRI —an effort to sweep up everyone who felt that Mexico had gone astray.
The blueprint for Rolling Loud was directly evocative of EDM festival programs, and I pondered whether or not these rappers massive Instagram followings would transcend their photo likes into true fans who actually cared enough about their music to show up and see them perform.
The god rays that beam down on the opening area of San Celini Island are matched for their moment's-pause impact as the piled-atop-each-other buildings of Bitanti Village, the game's second stage, beautifully evocative of southern Italy's more rural coastal settlements.
Rewind "Women in Love," directed by Ken Russell from the playwright and activist Larry Kramer's adaptation of D. H. Lawrence's 1920 novel, is a double period piece — set in the aftermath of World War I and evocative of the late 1960s, when it was made.
It also ties together the exhibit, from the entryway — a circle of pillars evocative of Neolithic standing stones, decorated with moments in the Heaney biography and oeuvre — to the exit, where a street-artist's painting of Heaney's last words are projected on a Dublin tenement.
The most colorful, artistic and meant to be evocative of the nature are the namagashi, or the perishable sweets that consist of a layer of nerikiri, a dough made of flour and finely strained white bean paste, and a more dense, coarse bean paste inside.
It's a welcome thing to find not only that my initial judgments were mistaken (so I have the opportunity to learn something new), but that Shrobe is an artist who's making collage that is alive, useful, and evocative of the complexity of our contemporary moment.
Advertise on Hyperallergic with Nectar Ads MEXICO CITY — The Canadian artist collective General Idea  found its drive in the AIDS epidemic, becoming aesthetically and conceptually refined in the in the 1970s and '123s, after long forays into absurdity and performances evocative of Dada and Fluxus.
In the wrong hands, watching an actor peer through the bitten centre of a baloney sandwich to "get a new view of the world" would be irritating or seem like terrible scriptwriting: Mr Rylance makes it both endearing and evocative of a sort of childlike wonder.
Within that framework, it seems to intentionally mix up positive and negative feelings through its instrumentation: familiar synth pulls and screeches characteristic of unbridled delight on the dancefloor are coated in a certain kind of messy rumble evocative of the feeling of wanting to throw up.
" In an interview with Sound & Picture, the show's supervising sound editor Jane Tattersall said that:  "The idea behind the voice-over is that Offred has recorded her story using a cassette recorder and so the sound quality of the voice-over is evocative of a cassette tape.
There's misty sample flips evocative of the cannibinoid atmosphere of the LA beat scene on "Skyla," locked-in exercises in malleted percussion on "Canis Major," and even straight up kosmische bliss on the closer "New Feelings," all stuff that casts its eyes clearly to the sky.
Still, listening to the New York Philharmonic's performance of "Tao" on Wednesday at David Geffen Hall, with David Robertson conducting, it was hard not to hear the piercing, high-pitched chords and tart melodic fragments of this 18-minute work as evocative of Asian styles and sonorities.
As always at Prada, the palette was off-kilter, evidence of Ms. Prada's wonderfully, willfully perverse talents as a colorist: mustard paired with maroon, wisteria with forest green, the dull pink of a turtleneck contrasted with trousers in a brown hue evocative of baby's first diaper.
Parts of the original Dutch house, around which the fighting took place, were used in the 1933 reconstruction, and the building was moved across the park from where it originally stood, but it's still as evocative of the period as it is anomalous in the neighborhood.
Finely crafted and evocative of a disappearing time and place, they have more in common with the sympathetic character studies that white photographers, such as Doris Ulmann, made of African Americans than with the portraits of urban sophisticates created by Polk's contemporaries, such as Van Der Zee.
Among many bars and clubs that have opened in Harlem in recent years, Gin Fizz — plush with velvet, seductively lit by chandeliers, determinedly evocative of the 1920s — would have made a fine setting for one of Motley's night scenes, especially when a jazz combo is working its intimate stage.
There are thick plastic drums evocative of hazardous waste containers and a bar stocked with fluorescent Red Bull-based cocktails—this being the crown jewel of the energy drink slingers' annual avant music festival in New York—a detail that is most probably coincidental, but feels striking nevertheless.
Letter To the Editor: Re "Secret Service Dreams of a (14-Foot, Spear-Tipped) Picket Fence" (White House Letter, May 30): Rather than erecting an iron fence, so evocative of a fortress mentality, why not install a high-tech barrier, drawing on cyber, laser, sonic or light technology?
Given its title, "Sunbather," Meromi's imaginary form — displaced from Cezanne's pastoral arcadian world of Aix-en-Provence — is more evocative of a person who has survived the radiation storm of a Bikini Island A-bomb test than someone out to catch a few rays in the South of France.
Enter Horse Jumper of Love, a slow rock trio from Boston who write songs evocative of Explosions in the Sky, early Radiohead and that feeling you get on Monday mornings when you're not really sure where you are or why you're still in the shower, but there you are.
"The point of this project was very much to build a game that was evocative of how you remember the old adventure titles," Gilbert tells me, moments after I've seen a decent slice of Thimbleweed Park in meticulous, mystery-unpicking action, all "Pick up" this and "Look at" that.
The episode was evocative of another in recent memory: a similar bipartisan meeting Trump held in January on immigration, where he at times seemed to suggest he'd support passing clean relief for young undocumented immigrants who had come to the US as children, including in another conversation with Feinstein.
And the tracks offer fantasias to match, blurring together the neon haze of supersonic trap production, drum programming that hurtles along at paces that leave even junglists with motion sickness, and towering synth work evocative of the unrepentant gleam of mainstream EDM, but you know, off-balance, a little surreal.
Aïnouz imbues Invisible Life with an intimacy that's at once blunt about bodily needs and evocative of the lushness of inner lives: globetrotting cinematographer Hélène Louvart saturates the film with palm greens, lusty reds and beachfront blues, and the sound design is alive with sounds of wind, water, and chirping birds.
New York-based School Of Visual Arts motion design student Kurt Rauffer took what is arguably the best of the Star Wars franchise, The Empire Strikes Back, and gave it a title sequence that is immediately evocative of the slick, design heavy James Bond opening title sequences we know and love.
In the open loading dock of the brewery, facing the beer garden, Pat Nelson stood behind a card table with a banner proclaiming "Big Boned Barbecue," and we ordered smoky-tender brisket evocative of West Texas ($11) and sausage ($5), with mac and cheese, cornbread and the fixings (onion, pickle slices, white bread).
Meanwhile, the Black heads here are small and relegated to the back, evocative of the countless unsung Black faces, maids, and mammies who were once relegated to the kitchens of America, without whom this well cultivated sphere of domesticity would have been insupportable The titles of Logan's works also help to convey his sharp irony.
His work — inspired by, and evocative of, graffiti — brought the street into the gallery, and vice versa, much as Jean-Michel Basquiat and his high school friend Al Diaz did around the turn of the decade, when their symbol "SAMO" suddenly sprouted on walls all across the city, the siren of a new sensibility.
So I visited Thierry Goldberg Gallery for Shrobe's exhibition Homegrown and came to understand that his assemblages are really his own — not anyone else's, though there are visual, material, and strategic elements in his work that are evocative of other artists, like flavor notes I recognize for having tasted them before in other wines.
This image, "Plate 34" (April 19, 1960) in the exhibition catalog We Shall Overcome: Press Photographs of Nashville in the Civil Rights Era is deeply evocative of the character of the entire classic Civil Rights Movement and its instantiation in that city: disciplined, trained, communal, nimbly able to circumvent obstacles while staying fixed on the goal ahead.
An art student hung six nooses, each a different color of the rainbow, from a tree at a university in Tennessee on Monday as part of a class project, the school said, provoking an uproar among students and staff members who saw them as a symbol of racism and homophobia evocative of the Ku Klux Klan.
Anchoring each maelstrom are the body parts most evocative of agency: (brown) eyes that are the putative windows of the soul, (dark brown) hands that give us the ability to both invent tools and utilize them, and (dark brown) feet that make us mobile, so that we are not perpetually tied to whatever fate we were born to.
But it's clear that getting rid of Trump is a key part of the story, and a key argument in the 2020 primary is over who is best suited to do that — a flashback candidate like Biden, someone like Harris or O'Rourke who's more evocative of the future, or a leftist like Bernie Sanders or Elizabeth Warren.
But even if the fine-tuned fixed points can be observed in settings that are increasingly evocative of life and its putative beginnings, some researchers see England's overarching thesis as "necessary but not sufficient" to explain life, as Walker put it, because it cannot account for what many see as the true hallmark of biological systems: their information-processing capacity.
Still, while Sócrates became a counterculture luminary not unlike Cruyff, challenging his own country's establishment with a fag hanging casually from his lips, the sight of a bejewelled, latter-day Maradona dragging contentedly on an enormous Cuban feels somewhat less evocative of dissident politics, especially considering his notorious lifestyle, flirtations with the establishment, and fast-and-loose approach to tax.
The daughter of acclaimed move star John Wayne lauded Donald TrumpDonald John TrumpPossible GOP challenger says Trump doesn't doesn't deserve reelection, but would vote for him over Democrat O'Rourke: Trump driving global, U.S. economy into recession Manchin: Trump has 'golden opportunity' on gun reforms MORE as a candidate evocative of her late father as she endorsed him at an event Tuesday.
A small wooden and steel cart with wheels references traditional shoe shiners who hock their services in the streets of Mexican cities; a worn and haggard cage serves as a vitrine for a serpentine sculpture evocative of Mesoamerican antiquities; and a splintered wooden plinth displays an eerie but sweet ceramic "la Santa Muerte" (Holy Death) figure, lovingly deposited within a brass and glass container.
In this she resembles Joni Mitchell, specifically in her mid-'70s period — the Joni Mitchell who on albums like Hejira combined the polished, restless liquidity of her thrown-together pseudojazz band and the inherent speechlike rhythms of her sung prosody to form a music of endless slipstream, one evocative of colloquial language while also employing metric patterns (and words!) too elaborate and too artificial for a wholly naturalistic representation.
The second section is perhaps even more disquieting, despite the sublimity of its colors; scarred with biomorphic forms evocative of sandstone fossils (a chain-link fence makes an appearance as well), it could be read as intimating the ecological collapse of the ocean, a view made more convincing by "atomic 123," with its right side seeming to dissipate or petrify, followed by "atomic 08," moss-streaked, devoid of blue, and bone-dry.
By contrast, Hans Haacke's characteristically incisive "Star Gazing" (2004), in which a red-T-shirted figure is hooded in the stripes of the U.S. flag, is an obvious point of reference and evocative of the current mood (the Abu Ghraib prisoner torture scandal, etched in the public imagination by the image of a hooded man atop a box in a "stress position," broke the same year), but the work's connection to upside-downness is less clear, which dilutes its impact in the context of the show.
In an essay written for the exhibition's lavish catalogue, Johann Thomas Ambrózy argues for an ethical reading of Schiele's work, positing that his stylistic details "unexpectedly prove to be linked to ethical themes": For example, it appears there are more than aesthetic reasons for the extremely enhanced expressivity in the composition of many of his depictions of bodies, especially in works on paper from the years 1913-14, where the skin is covered with downright disgusting spots of paint evocative of decomposition and putrefaction.
But they also share space with works by a roster of lesser-known but still impressive talents: inventive portraiture by the brothers Adolfo and Oliver Sanchez, as well as by Stephen Tashjian; silk-screens by John Sex; photographs by Katherine Dumas, Joseph Szkodzinski, Tseng Kwong Chi, and Ande Whyland; videos of the singer Klaus Nomi; 8-millimeter films by Lisa Baumgardner; and perhaps most evocative of the period, the hand-designed and photocopied fliers advertising the artists' shows — many of them pieces of art in their own right.

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