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106 Sentences With "monographs"

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

I also have to read a lot of scholarly monographs.
There were rare books, monographs, invitations to exhibits and articles.
His rising stock has brought a shelf's worth of monographs.
Few go to academic monographs or journal articles to dig deeper.
No such record of the deliberations behind IARC's monographs is published.
The selection is a mix of photography monographs and other art books.
He is working on two monographs that will be published in the spring.
Unlike other monographs, A Designer's Art was meant to be read, not flipped through.
She also said none of the monographs on Chareau had mentioned he was Jewish.
Between 183 and 2015, for example, IARC published or started 18 monographs involving 314 scientists.
When I started, looking at photography monographs in Cape Town was a totally alien idea.
Downstream would be midnight showings, monographs, dorm rooms, and weed, but first there was the letdown.
N.Y. ART BOOK FAIR One of the largest fairs for artist books, monographs and zines. Sept.
N.Y. ART BOOK FAIR One of the largest fairs for artist books, monographs and zines. Sept.
Still, Alabama and Tennessee have attempted to ban his many monographs, calling their contents child pornography.
His work has recently been the subject of monographs and a five-volume set published by Steidl.
IARC would like to reiterate that draft versions of the Monographs are deliberative in nature and confidential.
The Chinese are just terra incognita—there are very few spy novels about them or even extensive monographs.
A 2014 study, published in the journal Communication Monographs, suggests that couples engaged in "demand/withdraw" patterns — i.e.
To me, arranging books solely by size makes sense only if you are a collector of art monographs.
Oof specializes in artist-made and locally published books and zines, as well as older catalogs and monographs.
And then there are the extension monographs, like for the social sectors and turning the flywheel and so forth.
Advertise on Hyperallergic with Nectar Ads A few weeks ago I reorganized my art books, monographs, and exhibition catalogues.
Meanwhile, a 2014 study, published in the journal Communication Monographs, suggests that couples engaged in "demand/withdraw" patterns — i.e.
There are movie/television option/purchase agreements in place and books, articles and monographs by scholars and academics abound.
According to a new study published in Communication Monographs, bragging in your dating profile won't actually get you many dates.
That's the conclusion of a new study from Florida State University researchers, published last week in the journal Communication Monographs.
Pride Month 2019 Visual monographs commemorating a culture of resistance and resilience on the 50th anniversary of the Stonewall rebellion.
A popular biography by Irving and Amy Wallace was published in the 1970s; more scholarly monographs have been published since.
Holdings include monographs on artists, art historical texts, art periodicals, and exhibition catalogs, as well as an extensive lecture archive.
Visual monographs on Claude Monet, Francis Bacon and, yes, Picasso are shelved alongside volumes of T.S. Eliot, Shakespeare and Evelyn Waugh.
Alas, very few museum visitors will read the catalogue; even fewer will see the monographs or, for that matter, his exhibition brochure.
Since I first discovered her in the '70s, Popova has benefited from much scholarly research and several excellent museum exhibitions and monographs.
The books on display ranged from "iPod and iTunes for Dummies" to one of those gorgeous $24,216 Taschen monographs on Muhammad Ali.
Sotavalta's papers in the National Library of Finland are a curious combination of letters, monographs on insect behavior, and stacks of sheet music.
Vases of ranunculi, pussy willows, and acanthus leaves sat on a table covered in monographs, programs, a bear mask from a museum opening.
And then we all wrote descriptions of our projects in a way that was very different from what we typically do in our monographs.
Perhaps their nefarious genius is best shown by their technique of acquiring pre-war monographs on their target artists that used "tipped-in" color plates.
The International Agency for Research on Cancer (IARC) regularly publishes "monographs," which proclaim the potential of many substances, everyday items, and activities to cause cancer.
For the study, published in the journal Communication Monographs, researchers recruited 49 college-aged women — all who said they wanted to be thinner — to participate.
In addition to his four-volume survey of American art, Mr. Sandler wrote monographs on Ms. Pfaff, Mr. Held, Mr. Katz and Mark di Suvero.
She also consults for public and private institutions, and has published comprehensive monographs and catalogues addressing contemporary visual arts from the Arab world and Iran.
The fair spotlights an eclectic range of artists' books, catalogues, monographs, periodicals, zines, ephemera, and multiples, presented by over 100 publishers, antiquarian dealers, artists, and galleries.
The campaign's website enumerates six principles for the reform of IARC's Monographs Program, and serves as a resource for those seeking more context around IARC's work.
In addition to her books on Ms. Parsons and the de Koonings, Ms. Hall wrote two monographs, "Wallace Herndon Smith: Paintings" (1987) and "Abe Ajay" (1990).
In the 1990s, he published and edited Stress, a hip-hop and graffiti magazine; he consulted for art exhibitions, and he wrote monographs on important artists.
It is the gallery of Howard and Mary Ann Rogers, art professors who began collecting in the 1980s and publishing a rich library of scholarly monographs.
The World New Made: Figurative Painting in the Twentieth Century is Timothy Hyman's brilliant follow up to his essential monographs on Pierre Bonnard and Sienese Painting.
Launched in 2016 by Colpa Press, Minnesota Street Project, and Park Life, SFABF spotlights an eclectic selection of artists' books, catalogues, monographs, periodicals, zines, ephemera, and multiples.
IARC says its methods are scientifically sound and its monographs are "widely respected for their scientific rigor, standardized and transparent process and ... freedom from conflicts of interest".
NEW YORK ART BOOK FAIR Where you can wander the halls of a huge former school, loading up on monographs, zines and, of course, tote bags. Sept.
Despite IARC's modest size and budget, its monographs - assessments of whether something is a cause of cancer - often catch the eyes and ears of policymakers and the public.
THE NY ART BOOK FAIR 10TH ANNUAL EDITION A long weekend mega-gathering of artists' books, exhibition catalogs, scholarly monographs, periodicals and zines organized by Printed Matter. Sept.
The long, relatively narrow studio is roughly divided by enormous cubbies stuffed with monographs, portfolios, coffee cans full of paintbrushes, intricately painted calaveras, and all sorts of collectibles.
His books and monographs included "The Law of Cause and Effect in Ancient Java" (1989) and "Entering the Dharmadhatu: A Study of the Gandavyuha Reliefs of Borobudur" (2012).
The same can be said of artist books: a sizable portion of the contemporary art produced today, artist monographs are still looked at as accessories to the real thing.
As part of our push for improvements to IARC's Monographs Program, the American Chemistry Council and its members have launched the Campaign for Accuracy in Public Health Research (CAPHR).
He contributed frequently to Art in America, Artforum and other publications, and wrote monographs on Mr. Marden, Ms. Freilicher and Joan Mitchell for the art publisher Harry N. Abrams.
He is the author of numerous foreign policy-related articles, white papers and monographs, specifically focused on the geopolitics and geostrategy of the former Soviet Union, Russia and Eurasia.
The agency says its "monographs" - the name it gives its classifications of carcinogens - are "widely respected for their scientific rigor, standardized and transparent process and ... freedom from conflicts of interest."
In books, biographies, monographs and program notes, Mr. Guest became one of the foremost authorities on dance in the Napoleonic and Victorian eras and notably on the Paris Opera Ballet.
The agency says its "monographs" - the name it gives its classifications of carcinogens - are "widely respected for their scientific rigor, standardized and transparent process and ... freedom from conflicts of interest".
He self-published 16 monographs of bodies laid bare, but only this year did TASCHEN release his first international collection, which features over 300 of his tantalizing photos in chronological order.
"That she was so willing to collaborate was a bit of a departure from the single-authored monographs that were common at the time," Ranhorn wrote in an email to Gizmodo.
That innovative approach, he said, would later be reflected in the monographs Mr. Gibson published through Lustrum Press of photographers including Larry Clark, Mary Ellen Mark, Danny Seymour and Neal Slavin.
Since 2004, he has helped run a small publishing house called Dent-De-Leon that produces monographs for friends like Max Lamb, the fashion designer Peter Jensen and the artist Ryan Gander.
Historians spend their lives learning more and more about less and less, producing narrow PhDs and turning them into monographs and academic articles, in the hamster-wheel pursuit of tenure and promotion.
"IARC considers any measures that would discourage scientists from participating in Monographs or would detract from open scientific debate to be contrary to the best interests of international public health," it added.
WHAT TO SEE The Asia Art Archive is a hidden treasure for art history fans, who can browse a collection of 50,000 print and digital items, including catalogs, monographs, multimedia and periodicals.
Recent IARC monographs have included judgments that red meat is carcinogenic and should be classified alongside arsenic and smoking, and that coffee, which IARC previously said might cause cancer, probably is not carcinogenic.
Ms. Haskell is perhaps best known as a champion of American art of the first half of the 20th century, having organized monographs of Marsden Hartley, Charles Demuth and Georgia O'Keeffe, among others.
Behind every birder is a library — a privately curated collection of dozens — even hundreds — of volumes, including field guides, bird-finding guides and specialized monographs on specific groups like warblers, sparrows or gulls.
What this insight has subsequently produced in practice is a discipline that now encompasses everything from statistical analyses of census data to accessible monographs about why people shoplift or the social processes of divorce.
Some monographs produced by Park's team were written by ''native informants'' — Louis Wirth on the Jewish ghetto, Paul Siu on the Chinese laundryman, Drake and Cayton on the black belt — and others by outsiders.
Jodidio himself has written the monographs for noted architects like Tadao Ando, Norman Foster, Renzo Piano, Jean Nouvel, and Zaha Hadid, making him a welcomed tour guide in the journey that is Architecture Now!
The Wolfsonian–Florida International University received a gift of over 650 items of rare photographic albums, ephemera, and monographs from philanthropist Jean S. Sharf and her late husband, collector and scholar Frederic A. Sharf.
" She often thinks of her work, not in terms of exhibitions, but their resulting monographs, because books are "more accessible than exhibitions — they circulate in the world," and because books exist as "complete entities.
He is married to a daughter of Lee Friedlander, a giant in the world of documentary photography, and has published 15 monographs with introductions by writers like Henry Louis Gates Jr. and Norman Mailer.
The study, published in June in Wildlife Monographs, suggests that when the Alaskan authorities were limiting wolf populations outside the Yukon-Charley preserve, survival rates of wolves within the preserve were lower than usual.
The book is Mr. Renaldi's fourth, and unlike his previous monographs (mostly portraits of strangers across the United States), this one comes from a very personal place: his fascination with New York night life.
It also led to a number of archaeological expeditions and monographs: Segalen was an amateur enthusiast who pioneered the field, even helping to locate the site of the Qin emperor's tomb and the Terracotta Warriors.
"This is about 10 degrees [Celsius] higher than people in North America [and Europe] like their coffee," said Dana Loomis, deputy head of the monographs section at the cancer research agency that led the review.
Photographs from his travels were collected in more than a dozen monographs, including "Marc Riboud: Photographs at Home and Abroad" (1986), "Marc Riboud: Journal" (1988) and "Marc Riboud in China: Forty Years of Photography" (1996).
Since then, there have been more conferences, monographs, speeches, blue-ribbon panels and recommendations — to say nothing of an unusual spate of municipal bankruptcies and insolvencies in which ailing pension plans have played starring roles.
But her husband and her mother were the attention-getters in this early part of her career, the arts writer David Ebony, who contributed to two monographs on Ms. Mason, said in a telephone interview.
Acid-Free also brought forth booksellers in tune with our current cultural and sociopolitical zeitgeist, offering art books on detention center architecture, monographs in translation, and new underground periodicals written by people living in the margins.
While teaching and raising the couple's three adopted children, she went on to be the author or co-author of 11 books, including a memoir, which she wrote at 99, and scores of monographs and essays.
The Brooklyn-born photographer Jamel Shabazz has been shooting New York streets and style for 30 years, drawing visual stories from the city's pavement and subway cars that have contributed to five monographs and countless exhibitions.
There are neither monographs devoted to her nor a catalogue raisonné; the few public photographs of Morton show her smiling, and the work — colorful, whimsical — has a similar warmth to it, a savvy but noncynical charm.
IARC defends its methods as scientifically sound and says its monographs - the name it gives to its classifications of carcinogens - are "widely respected for their scientific rigor, standardized and transparent process and ... freedom from conflicts of interest".
Considering that our federal government foots the bill for roughly two-thirds of IARC's Monographs Program, it's even harder to understand why policymakers and the public are left in the dark trying to decipher IARC's baffling decisions.
The Acid-Free Art Book Market brought forth booksellers in tune with the cultural and sociopolitical zeitgeist, offering books on detention center architecture, monographs in translation, and new underground periodicals written by people living in the margins.
Bridget Riley and Lucian Freud, two of the most significant British artists of the 20th and early 21st centuries, are each the subject of new multivolume monographs, exquisitely illustrated on stock heavy enough to be framed and mounted.
While teaching art history at the University of California, Berkeley, he was approached by the art historians Anthony Blunt and Rudolf Wittkower to write a survey of Michelangelo's architecture for a series of architectural monographs they were editing.
Unlike in other artist's monographs, which tend to separate essays from the images, his narrative is woven through the entire book, forming a rhythm between the recurring visage of this exposed human core, and his considerations of its ubiquity in art.
Monographs, biographies, keynotes, and entire exhibitions have focused on Dieter Rams, the renowned German designer whose clean, functional aesthetic made Braun a household name in the 20th century, and paved the way for design-focused companies like Apple and Muji.
Free and open to the public, Printed Matter's LA Art Book Fair is a unique event for artists' books, art catalogues, monographs, periodicals, and zines presented by over 290012 international presses, antiquarians, artists, and independent publishers from over 20 countries.
From his first solo show in 1989, Wolfe's sculptures and wall pieces were all-but-perfect replicas of worn, well-used copies of modern classics and artist monographs and catalogs — usually his own — tweaked to within a hair of the original.
" In an introductory text in the exhibition's accompanying catalog — another volume in the museum's ongoing series of well-produced monographs about prominent, Gugging-related artists — Feilacher recalls, "There were two kinds of states in Schöpke's life: an active one and a withdrawn one.
He's known for shooting athletes like Olympic sprinter Usain Bolt and soccer star Mario Balotelli for high-profile companies like Puma and Nike—but he's also published six monographs that focus on the harrowing street culture of cities such as São Paulo and Belgrade.
The room's centerpiece, an imposing bookcase, is packed with fashion tomes, a few to do with Chanel, for whom she models; monographs featuring the work of Basquiat, Eggleston and Mapplethorpe; books about food, travel and the Beatles; and novels by Dostoyevsky, Hesse and Kafka.
Ben Spizz — who showed me around his street-art boutique, Le Lavo//matik, which sells artist monographs, custom T-shirts, LPs, and original graffiti artwork, and, overall, evokes the feel of the East Village in its 1980s heyday, except the place is much cleaner.
During her time as a student at Central Saint Martins (she dropped out before completing her MA to start her own label in 2014), she spent many hours there — though, she says, she prefers artist's monographs and old history books to anything on fashion.
"If IARC does not provide a full response to the request for potential witnesses, the committee will consider whether the values of scientific integrity and transparency are reflected in IARC Monographs and if future expenditures of federal taxpayer dollars to this end need to continue," they wrote.
Haviv's three previous monographs have focused on specific places and conflicts: Bosnia, Afghanistan, and Haiti, but The Lost Rolls, published by print-on-demand company Blurb, focuses instead on the images that were never used in his professional career — indeed, were never until now even developed.
At a Paris soiree for one of her coffee-table monographs, she brusquely chastises a cellphone user; when someone offers to snap her picture at a red-carpet event, she shoves a passer-by out of the frame; and she castigates the filmmakers more than once.

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