Sentences Generator
And
Your saved sentences

No sentences have been saved yet

"rediscovery" Definitions
  1. the act or process of finding again something that had been forgotten or lost

283 Sentences With "rediscovery"

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

My own route to retro-bra rediscovery was through vintage clothing.
Nostalgia isn't the point of the festival, and neither is rediscovery.
In that rediscovery is a return to roots for Mr. Forsythe.
This is synergy, mutualism and adaptation awaiting rediscovery on the mainland.
Conservationists cheered the rhino's rediscovery, only to mourn the animal weeks later.
Contreras shares her personal story of self-identity and rediscovery with us.
The Chinese rediscovery of liberalism was based on a very similar experience.
SETH COLTER WALLS Read our article on the rediscovery of Julius Eastman.
Exceptional in more ways than one, Olivia proves to be ripe for rediscovery.
We're well-acquainted at this point with the luxury world's rediscovery of logomania.
To me, it seems more like a sonic aesthetic than a generational rediscovery.
He was also responsible for the rediscovery of Alban Berg's "Wozzeck" in Austria.
"It's been a rediscovery and maybe a rekindling of interest," Ms. Mangan said.
Trump may seem an unlikely representative for this American rediscovery of its global purpose.
"We're creating a new category called talent rediscovery," said Restless Bandit CEO Steve Goodman.
The houses, however, continued to be vandalized since their rediscovery within the blighted community.
It's not exactly learning something new, but a rediscovery can be wonderful, can't it?
Wanda's rediscovery has been a slow-burn continual process rather than a single event.
Barnes, however, has not been involved in the reissues or rediscovery of her work.
The controversial Mary MacLane, or "the Wild Woman of Butte," is another fascinating rediscovery.
But he's still under the institutional radar, a protean artist awaiting rediscovery and appraisal.
The site remained untouched for over 1,500 years until its rediscovery in the 18th century.
Rediscovery & Usage: After the install hurdle, most apps are just forgotten and never re-used.
And this phenomenon has led to renationalization of individual states and rediscovery of national identity.
Painted around 1640-5, this was another recent rediscovery and was priced at $5 million.
REDISCOVERY Decades after the movement flourished, its female practitioners are at long last being recognized.
George Nierenberg directed it, on film, and the classics-rediscovery outfit Milestone oversaw its restoration.
It's a heartrending love letter to the magic of rediscovery & latent powers our legacies hold.
The Michelangelo, also a rediscovery, brought £5.94 million, or $8.76 million, at Sotheby's in 2001.
But its rediscovery is giving new life to a heroic story of a bygone era.
The recent rediscovery of Eastman's work has spread to choreographers, and that's a good trend.
It's a chance for discovery and rediscovery, of course, but also of critical assessment and reassessment.
This is not the first time a species' discovery or rediscovery has triggered a collecting frenzy.
The community was founded in 1630 and originally called "James Cittie," according to Jamestown Rediscovery Foundation .
The community was founded in 1630 and originally called "James Cittie,"  according to Jamestown Rediscovery Foundation .
Suddenly Woo had been given the rediscovery treatment: vinyl repressing, and wide distribution, and critical attention.
Their appearance at True/False hopefully presages a major rediscovery of them in the near future.
Yet the rediscovery of Heimat will bear fruit only if the term is once again redefined.
I hope that the rediscovery of black films of the '90s does more than invoke nostalgia.
There's a relaxed air of self-acceptance that pervades the album, mixed with the thrill of rediscovery.
Our answer will be a renewal of will, a rediscovery of resolve and a rebirth of devotion.
Its rediscovery was followed by six years of research to prove its origins (and justify the price).
The mystery contained in its pages has meant it has been continuously open to redefinition and rediscovery.
Mr. Ramos invoked an electoral "Christopher Columbus syndrome," the rediscovery of Hispanic voters during each presidential cycle.
Our answer will be a renewal of will, a rediscovery of resolve, and a rebirth of devotion.
"This fascination seems a lot more like a collective in-joke than a conscientious rediscovery," argues Maxo.
In the years between the contest and the map's rediscovery, Mr. D'Adamo found his calling — in transportation.
The rediscovery has renewed hope that more of the region's forests are home to the rare species.
Our answer will be a renewal of will, a rediscovery of resolve and a rebirth of devotion.
While Hurley led its rediscovery, Dr. Joan Maynard led its restoration and its evolution into the 21st century.
James Horn, president of the Jamestown Rediscovery Foundation, is confident this is the man they think it is.
This selfless rediscovery of ballet tradition by an important creative artist has been changing the whole ballet landscape.
There may not be comfort in that rediscovery, but Pittard creates, at least, the feeling of emotional truth.
Like other recent resurgences of older, overlooked female artists, the rediscovery of Ms. Corse is also market driven.
A summary with an article on Tuesday about the rediscovery of an insect in Wales misstated its species.
The rediscovery of an insect in Wales hints at environmental DNA sampling's potential to change endangered species protection.
He helped spread word about the species' rediscovery through his YouTube and Facebook posts, which garnered thousands of views.
Paganism has also been a very empowering path for women, especially with its rediscovery and honouring of the Goddess.
And that has opened the way for a rediscovery of what gives policy meaning in the first place: politics.
His burial site was first unearthed in 1885, but was lost to shifting sands until its rediscovery in 2010.
Scholars described Millay as a thoroughly modern woman whose complexity and progressive outlook make her work prime for rediscovery.
We have these stories of rediscovery, but the bigger picture is amphibians are in trouble, and do need help.
It's a visual tribute to the art of digging in the crates and to the rediscovery of lost music online.
" For Franklin, the joy of rediscovery began with putting herself first, no small feat for a self-described "people pleaser.
In recent decades, tarot devotees, intrigued by the initials "PCS" on each card, have spearheaded the rediscovery of her work.
The recent rediscovery and reissue of her books — her memoirs are especially resonant — has been a deep pleasure to witness.
Rediscovery Bruce Goff's midcentury houses across the Midwest are symbols of both a heartland-born eccentricity and a distinct Modernism.
It wasn't just the rediscovery of the Permian that helped restart the oil boom after plunging prices almost killed it.
Which is one reason that the city offers so much alfresco art in the summertime: it's a chance for rediscovery.
"With all the bad news coming out about things in the natural world, this (rediscovery) gives me hope," Bolt said.
The return of "Macle" is part of a broad rediscovery of Eastman's music since his death, in obscurity, in 1990.
"If there's any good that can come out this, it would be the rediscovery of what really, truly was a classic."
Kathryn Hahn stars in this story of sexual rediscovery on HBO, and Robert Eggers's Puritan nightmare is available to stream. MRS.
Following the lizard's rediscovery, Nijman and other conservationists approached Indonesian authorities numerous times about addressing the growing crisis but were ignored.
Rather than a "marketing project" as my dear pen-pal expressed, my business has been a rediscovery and celebration of myself.
There was also a new "Rediscovery" element, consisting of 14 booths with works by overlooked artists working from 1917 to 1987.
There is a nationalistic component to this rediscovery, an imperative to embrace the country's past, its agricultural heritage and its pain.
The statue purchased by Benioff is "an important rediscovery that is sure to inspire continued scholarship and interest," according to Christie's.
A stunning exhibition of Sara Kathryn Arledge makes a strong case for her as an overlooked artist deserving reevaluation and rediscovery.
Firstly the discovery of the new, but secondly, and perhaps more importantly, the rediscovery of the under-celebrated and under-discussed.
Part of the pleasure of Eastman's rediscovery has been the belated, deserving reinsertion of a black, gay figure into music history.
Doctor Manhattan's disappearance and rediscovery felt like a huge turning point; so did the reveal of who the Seventh Kavalry was.
"And After the Fire," partly based in history, posits the rediscovery of a fictional Bach church cantata with a particularly bilious text.
Rather, it's just part of a journey of not only reinvention but rediscovery of who I am and what I care about.
Egyptian modern art appears to be the latest to undergo this process of rediscovery and integration into the larger history of art.
Khoshbakht addresses his interest in rediscovery through moments of personal remembrance, discussing his grandmother's shifting relationship to the moving image via television.
Perhaps the rediscovery of the hoop by members of the aging baby-boom generation is an expression of yearning for lost youth.
Harold Hanson's book, The Giant Canada Goose, chronicles the rediscovery of a species once thought extinct (as well as some breeding advice).
Heartstrings are pulled backwards and forwards simultaneously, ultimately grounding you in the present with a sense of both knowing weariness and joyful rediscovery.
While these haven't received a fraction of the attention Wanda has, both are valid continuations of her style and also worthy of rediscovery.
DNA: The rediscovery of a fly species in Wales shows how a novel process called environmental DNA sampling can help monitor endangered species.
Mr. Macadam, of the Buglife conservation charity, said the species' rediscovery has rekindled hope for other critically endangered invertebrates that have gone missing.
Bret: The larger story of the year — not just for me, but for many Americans — has been the rediscovery of our shared liberalism.
"Rediscovery" explores Botticelli's influence on the Pre-Raphaelites in the mid-19th century with works by Dante Gabriel Rossetti and William Morris among others.
The rediscovery of socialism as a label, attitude, and beginning of a program has sometimes resembled a musician relearning an instrument after a stroke.
Hi-NRG faded away, and with it, Cowley's myth and music — until its recent rediscovery by Josh Cheon of the record label Dark Entries.
The auction house did not identify the seller, a European private collector who acquired the work after its rediscovery in 2005 and lengthy restoration.
As the van Gogh museum notes, the last rediscovery of a drawing by the Post-Impressionist — a pencil work from 1880 — was in 2012.
For nearly four decades, scientists had believed it was lost to science — or perhaps, even extinct — until its rediscovery on January 25, CNN reported.
There began a journey of rediscovery of my love of reading, of returning to the thing I used to love more than anything else.
There is no grand evolution, just an endless process of rediscovery and reappraisal, as various styles and poses go in and out of fashion.
The second, from philosophy, refers to an un-forgetting; the rediscovery of an innate or inherited knowledge once held but that has been lost.
Last year, MoMA unveiled its restoration of Ernst Lubitsch's 1923 "Rosita" — a major rediscovery by any standard — for the first time in New York.
Berlin (22008-22018) was a writer of tender, chaotic and careworn short stories, and her rediscovery this decade has been a pleasure to witness.
The rediscovery of this stonefly also suggests how the technique might contribute to efforts to save some of the world's most critically endangered organisms.
These hits resulted in the rediscovery of "Can't Hold Us," a relentlessly upbeat motivational anthem with the energy of a small star going nova.
So it's been striking to see that recently, feminists have started invoking Dworkin, who died in 2005, in a spirit of respect and rediscovery.
The rediscovery was viewed by a number of key specialists in an exhibition at the Pinacoteca di Brera museum in Milan in 2016-17.
But since its rediscovery in the early 20th century, the tale of Ahab's hubristic vendetta against the whale has become an all-purpose political fable.
This weekend, there will be a rediscovery of past projects related to broadening these horizons when the sun makes contact with Venus retrograde on Friday.
The London show is part of a surge in interest in Miró, who is having "a moment of rediscovery," said Joan Punyet Miró, his grandson.
The anonymous art-historian in question was in fact Théophile Thoré, a political journalist, art critic and historian best-known for his rediscovery of Vermeer.
An eighth species was discovered on Maui in 2012, and prior to the rediscovery, only two species still exist in the wild, the statement said.
"It means a rediscovery of Tutankhamun ... for Egypt it is a very big discovery, it could be the discovery of the century," el-Damaty said.
Among his claims to fame is his standing as the first foreign collector to have gotten hold of the earless monitor lizard following its rediscovery.
His most recent rediscovery, detailed last month in PLOS One, was of Frankixalus jerdonii, a species thought to have been extinct for nearly 150 years.
Even so, it's a landmark — a first step, though not the last, in the rediscovery of one of the greatest artists of the 20th century.
" Mr. Traglio added, "There's been an extraordinary rediscovery of the Italian artisan in the last 20 years thanks to the success of the luxury market.
As the restoration project continues, Ms. Hallam Smith, the historical consultant, said that the latest rediscovery of forgotten history was unlikely to be the last.
The rediscovery of Greco-Roman sculpture in the 15th century spawned a long-held misperception that the artists of Antiquity intentionally left their work unpainted.
The exhibition is an important step in the rediscovery of an artist who, in the past, has consciously decided not to show her works for years.
Navigating 360 degrees from the looming columns to the reflective floor, it's an opportunity for anyone to experience some of the wonder of the cistern's rediscovery.
This new release, he says, carries a tonal quality that speaks to the joy and the rediscovery of oneself after having emerged on the other side.
It's not as simple as "there's always more than meets the eye"—it's the knowledge that politics, narrative, and example are processes of rediscovery and questioning.
It not only displays a wide selection of Arledge's work, but also makes a strong case for her as an overlooked artist deserving reevaluation and rediscovery.
Progressives' rediscovery of states' rights reflects more the need for pragmatic ways of resisting Trump more than it does a major policy position on the left.
It's the latest example of an entertainment company's heading back to the production centers of Hollywood's golden age, with the recent rediscovery of old movie lots.
Even the rediscovery of Frida Kahlo in the 1980s did little to reshape our expectation that Mexican Modernism is predominately political, passionately nationalistic, and overtly masculine.
If depression is present, once treated, there can be a lifting of spirits, desire to stay around longer and rediscovery of a sense of meaning in life.
DRAMATIC VOLCANO DEATH: HUGE FLYING STONE CRUSHED MAN IN POMPEII, ARCHAEOLOGISTS DISCOVER The site remained untouched for over 1,500 years until its rediscovery in the 18th century.
Advertise on Hyperallergic with Nectar Ads Part of the pleasure of Eastman's rediscovery has been the belated, deserving reinsertion of a black, gay figure into music history.
"We have a lot of world-renowned experts working with us on this," Mary Anna Hartley, a senior archaeologist with Jamestown Rediscovery Foundation, told The Washington Post.
The "deferred acceptance" algorithm now in use in the system was discovered by medical staff before its rediscovery by David Gale and Lloyd Shapley in the 1960s.
Ms. Green's "Be Natural: The Untold Story of Alice Guy Blaché," in the retrospective program, tracks the life, career and rediscovery of the world's first female director.
In 2010, the rediscovery of his science fiction mini-series "World on a Wire" showed that he had gotten the jump on "Inception" by almost 40 years.
It's also a book about author Juli Berwald's rediscovery of her former fascination with jellyfish, of her love for science, and of the sheer joy of learning.
The first wave of rediscovery had ukases and prohibitions—Alec Wilder wrote off essentially all of Rodgers and Hammerstein, and almost everything self-consciously "jazzy" in Gershwin.
A crucial rediscovery of recent years has been the work of Terry Jennings and Dennis Johnson, who joined Young in his early explorations of stripped-down textures.
The rediscovery of Luzia in the ashes of the National Museum is a major find for officials looking to build a new institution in the former's shadow.
Advertise on Hyperallergic with Nectar Ads Each year, AFI Fest devotes part of its program to its Cinema's Legacy series, a retrospective of older films deserving of rediscovery.
Christie's did not identify the seller, other than to say it was a European private collector who acquired the work after its rediscovery in 2005 and lengthy restoration.
A 1996 Wall Street Journal article that's been quietly sitting on the web, waiting for its rediscovery and renewed relevance, has found its moment on Twitter this week.
On Sunday Francis called for the "rediscovery of the Jewish roots of Christianity" and repeated an appeal for Catholic to "say 'no' to every form of anti-Semitism".
What brings extremists back home, as it were, is a rediscovery of those needs, and finding sources of significance beyond the ideological prescriptions that have circumscribed their lives.
The 5,800-ton Dmitri Donskoii, a first class armored cruiser, first set sail in 1885, according to the Shinil Group, the company which announced its rediscovery this week.
The lesson to take from the previous round is that children don't automatically open the doors to a rediscovery of active government or a robust social safety net.
For Ms. Delany, best known for her television roles, that may partly reflect the pleasure of rediscovering the stage in a role that is itself about self-rediscovery.
His operas became rare after World War I, however, and concert performances predominated even during a rediscovery that took place in the second half of the 20th century.
It also figured in her rediscovery by, among others, the Sussex University art historian David Alan Mellor, who said he was captivated by the film as a teenager.
Her ascent, and the rediscovery of some of the last century's great Italian female writers, has encouraged a new wave of women and shaken the country's literary establishment.
Before that, "Abendland" was commonly used in the 19th century in connection with the rediscovery of the German past, specifically the music and architecture of the medieval period.
In 22012 I reviewed this forgotten painter's first solo show in New York since 239 (also at Meredith Ward), and wondered how many more female artists awaited rediscovery.
A group of researchers made a stunning "rediscovery" of the elusive critter and took the first photos and video of a living Wallace's giant bee on January 25.
But chiefly the captain tries to keep an eye on Johanna as she struggles to adjust to her new life, shown most vividly through her rediscovery of English.
Geyrhalter's work is prime for discovery or rediscovery, and a new box set from Icarus Films, co-released with KimStim, provides the perfect opportunity to dive into it.
The rediscovery of an ancient underground city in Turkey a few years ago was an exciting find—the very kind of exciting find that the internet eats up.
The NTBG said in its statement that the rediscovery offers new hope that other species that are "thought to be extinct" may still survive in hard to access areas.
And, perhaps, it was the Grateful Dead's enormous and resolutely nontraditional success—and critical rediscovery in the early 22016st century—that provided one tipping point for taping's new acceptance.
The antidote, he suggested, was the rediscovery of a sense of common good, rooted in a deep, internalised knowledge of the past and feeling of obligation to future generations.
But in the darkness of the video gallery, with my phone in my pocket, Mr. McQueen was offering me, at least in his best works, a rediscovery of slowness.
What follows is her journey of rediscovery — of her passion, of her spirituality, of her artistic abilities, and of herself — that evolves in her real life and in dreams.
AT 23 MINUTES 22 SECONDS I'm always on the lookout for new performances of works by Julius Eastman, the long-forgotten composer whose rediscovery I wrote about last year.
Robyn's emotional path and rediscovery aren't exactly linear on Honey, which makes for an interesting listen, bouncing through, almost how you would in real-time, a spectrum of experiences.
Cartola became known as a songwriter in the 1930s but didn't find real popularity until the last decade of his life, through a rediscovery process that has never really stopped.
Boogie-woogie, the fast-paced precursor to swing that was popularised in the 1920s, is the latest focus of a rediscovery of jazz and pop that characterises his recent releases.
Critic's Pick We still live in an Age of Rediscovery regarding the role of women in art, and revelations regularly reshape the way we view both female creators and subjects.
Organized thematically, the exhibition includes more than half of the roughly 28 works that have been attributed to Gerstl since his rediscovery by Viennese art dealer Otto Kallir in 215.
Being on the peaceful seminary campus, with its Gothic tower, Oxford-style dining hall and stained-glass chapels, helps elevate the discussions every two weeks about rediscovery and social justice.
This blue's creation, loss, and rediscovery cover centuries of human history, from the tombs of Egyptian kings, to the 19th-century archaeological digs at Pompeii, to the modern forensics lab.
Last year, the doctor&aposs family approached an auction house about the painting they had always referred to as the "funny old man," and last week news of its rediscovery surfaced.
A rediscovery of Galbraith's ideas could clarify the deeper argument they're having and permit clearer questions: Which institutions would they like to see gain power, and how would they do it?
His feelings of guilt in the face of his relatives' suffering, as well as his rapt rediscovery of the native landscape, are characteristic attitudes of the émigré, as he well knows.
Concurrent with the happy rediscovery of the "Sottsass look," design studios around the world have been producing boldly hued and playfully geometric wares for consumers who have tired of colorless minimalism.
Even after all this work and preparation, there are still plenty of trips when all the effort doesn't lead to a rediscovery, but Galante doesn't consider these adventures to be failures.
The film's rediscovery and restoration, leading to its belated theatrical debut this weekend at the Brooklyn Academy of Music, is a cause for celebration, although with an inevitable note of melancholy.
The end result has been the rediscovery and/or rebirth of older analog technologies that provide some kind of tactile physical experience that a purely digital world has started to remove.
Perennially ripe for rediscovery, Julien Duvivier (21950-21949) was a prolific if uneven filmmaker with a five-decade career that included a short stint in Hollywood and encompassed a variety of genres.
What eventually propelled him to posthumous fame was the rediscovery of his 21961 book " Stoner ," a small-scale, modestly written campus novel that follows a mid-ranking academic from cradle to deathbed.
Almost as intriguing as the cache is the serpentine story of the documents' rescue and rediscovery, much of which had been known before but which has been updated with the new find.
His is an extreme sort of self-rediscovery: for Barney, to understand the chemical and physical processes that we come to be defined by is to go through them all over again.
Though she was identified with the Abstract Expressionist genre her whole life — her early work has been the focus of a rediscovery recently — she experimented with styles and materials throughout her career.
" The modern era in child protection began with the rediscovery of child abuse, in July, 1962, when the Journal of the American Medical Association published a paper called "The Battered-Child Syndrome.
Such inadvertent leaps of the imagination indicate a profound confidence in improvisation, though accompanied by a reluctance to explore the human subject matter that seems to me a significant part of her rediscovery.
While Federer has won the tournament for the last two years, Djokovic's history in Australia and rediscovery of his form last year means the world number one will be the man to beat.
"The Taking of Christ," the most significant rediscovery in recent decades of a major work by the artist, had been hanging on a wall in a Jesuit House in Dublin since the 1930s.
Galante's opinion is one to be trusted, he and the Extinct or Alive crew have already uncovered species that the world literally left for dead, including the rediscovery of the Fernandina Giant Tortoise.
She's been a regular visitor to the Mountainfilm festival here in Telluride, a former mining town that went through hipster rediscovery and has retained something of that spirit in its current upscale incarnation.
The recent rediscovery involves a United States Forest Service archaeologist, railroad historians and a team of archaeology graduate students who have embarked on a research project that may take five years to complete.
Tribute shows — some with Byrne himself — followed, and while Onyeabor still refused to grant many interviews or participate in the shows, he did acknowledge the rediscovery in a 2014 interview with The New Yorker.
To be fair to both forecasters, Spam's rediscovery isn't totally new: Gothamist covered Spam's Brooklyn comeback in 2014, and the trendy Los Angeles restaurant Animal has been playing around with it for a decade.
Leonardo's works do show a striking fixation on androgyny, a term often used about his figures—a fixation that became unignorable with the rediscovery, in the nineteen-nineties, of a long-lost pornographic drawing.
It is arguing for the power of art to answer a longing to be "recognized," while bringing about the rediscovery of "our own powers of remembrance," a pastime that demands the closest possible attention.
But starting in the 1980s, the Pesaro festival — which ended on Friday — pursued the scholarly rediscovery of even Rossini's most obscure compositions, together with a dedication to teaching the magnificent fireworks of Rossinian style.
But starting in the 1980s, the Pesaro festival — which ended on Friday — pursued the scholarly rediscovery of even Rossini's most obscure compositions, together with a dedication to teaching the magnificent fireworks of Rossinian style.
At Historic Jamestown, the site of the 1607 James Fort and the settlement of Jamestown, I spent my final afternoon in the Triangle with David Givens, director of archaeology for the Jamestown Rediscovery Program.
When he emerged with "Maxwell's Urban Hang Suite" in 1996, Maxwell was categorized as neo-soul, signaling a rediscovery of soul singing in an R&B world that had been changed forever by hip-hop.
As the Post's Elahe Izadi notes, the rediscovery of the Bertolucci clip came at a time when Bill Cosby was facing sexual assault charges and the treatment of women in Hollywood was receiving increased scrutiny.
From once being sold for $1900 to being called "the greatest artistic rediscovery of the 21st century," Leonardo da Vinci's "Salvator Mundi" painting has captivated the attention of art lovers around the world once again.
The government has shut down organizations that helped foster Jewish rediscovery, prohibited residents from gathering to worship for Passover and other holidays, and removed signs and relics of the city's Jewish past from public places.
As the headliner in the "Discovery and Rediscovery" exhibit, the painting, which dates to 1627, will be outfitted with a "smart" lighting system that lets visitors view it through a range of different lighting scenarios.
If "Thirteen Days of Love" is a lesser film — an attempt, Bromberg said, to recapture the magic of "La Belle de Nuit" — that doesn't make Valray any less a director in need of serious rediscovery.
With the current surge of rediscovery, some important women who were excised from history and then dropped back in at a future date (which is certainly better than nothing) now find themselves victims of that history.
It's almost impossible to find a moment in this game that doesn't look and sound just perfect, and with changing weather across changing seasons, the process of playing Forza Horizon 4 is one of constant rediscovery.
The rediscovery of Dion is attributed to English antiquarian William Martin Leake in 1806, but it's only in the last four decades that major archaeological excavations have taken place at its temples, homes, and city walls.
The MOMA show, elegantly curated by Anne Umland, climaxes a period of rediscovery of Picabia's work, in which scholars have noticed that the anti-academic artist met, in advance, just about every academic criterion of postmodernism.
What We Left Unfinished is the result of her and her collaborators' research into the archive and their rediscovery of the five films it showcases, as well as all the others still in need of preservation.
The rediscovery of the fiction and essays of 1970's Hollywood It Girl Eve Babitz has been a literary joy, and as her backlist has been slowly re-released it's fun to savor each and every morsel.
Fall devotes chapters to Egdod's beautiful and painstakingly logical rediscovery of things like rot and rebirth, while his living friends piece together his actions through a glass — or at least, a visualization of computational resource costs — darkly.
An immediate hit for The WB network, millions flocked to the show —myself included— to watch three single women in their twenties engage in self-exploration and rediscovery of familial bonds while kicking ass and taking names.
The rediscovery of the distinctive Minimalist composer Julius Eastman, who died in obscurity in 1990, took a major step forward on Wednesday, when the publisher G. Schirmer announced it would restore, reconstruct, publish and promote his music.
Professor Berger pushed back against that trend in his book "A Rumor of Angels: Modern Society and the Rediscovery of the Supernatural," published in 1969 and for many years required reading in college sociology and theology courses.
The Battle of the Boyne was significant to the rediscovery of Newgrange, which had been ignored or used as a source for building materials, because a follower of William of Orange, Charles Campbell, took over the property.
Mitchnick had a solo exhibition of her large-scale paintings at MOCAD in 2016 and, together with the program at Simone De Sousa, it formed a powerful moment of rediscovery for one of Detroit's major contemporary art movements.
Her rediscovery began a little over 21972 years ago when a mini-survey, I am the Beautiful Stranger — Paintings of the '22011s (March 21982–April 21980, 21989), thoughtfully curated by Arne Glimcher, opened at PaceWildenstein to wide acclaim.
ATLAS Tuesday, June 11, 2019 – 8 pm Inspired by the life of explorer Alexandra David-Néel, Meredith Monk's three-act "quest opera" uses Monk's inimitable and hypnotic style to explore the loss and rediscovery of our inherent wonder.
You can slap all the names you want on them, but there's nothing new under the sun and everything in this business is a continuation or a rediscovery of something done before—from the berimbolo to the shift.
" Ms. Kloman declined to comment on the doubts subsequently raised about the sculpture, but a Christie's representative said last week in an email that it was "an important rediscovery that is sure to inspire continued scholarship and interest.
Many critics, as well as friends of Ms. Lee, found the timing and the rediscovery story suspicious, and openly questioned whether Ms. Lee, who was shielded from the press by Ms. Carter, was mentally competent to approve its publication.
With no documentary film to attest to their contributions, they haven't yet enjoyed the kind of history-correcting rediscovery afforded James Brown's bands, or Motown's Funk Brothers, or the Los Angeles-based session players known as the Wrecking Crew.
"Pachelbel was pretty much nowheresville in performance," Ms. Sisman said, until, she added, a modern edition of the sheet music was published in the 20th century, a period of rediscovery for baroque music, including that of Pachelbel and Vivaldi.
Priorat's rediscovery was spurred by young French and Spanish winemakers who recognized potential in the old stands of garnacha and cariñena planted in what the Catalans call llicorella, the stony soils of brown slate that occasionally sparkle with quartzite.
There is a sense in which the Labour Party's rediscovery of its radical roots following Jeremy Corbyn's election as its leader in 2015 arrived too little and too late to check these long-term processes of fraction and disillusion.
At times I feel like an archaeologist digging through my own son's history, unearthing moments that would otherwise seem banal — ambient breathing, or the sounds of action figures at battle — yet through their rediscovery, suddenly take on a new significance.
The Washington Post's Michael E. Ruane wrote a riveting account of the patent file's rediscovery in March in "a special records storage cave" in Lenexa, Kansas, where an archivist found it stuffed in a manila envelope with a White House logo.
It's one of six ingenious poems and 42 temple hymns written by Enheduanna that have survived, along with a number of other items including a carved disk, excavated in the late 1920s, that led to her rediscovery as a historic figure.
"The brain is truly fascinating and much in the way that our brains are able to achieve total coherence — finding enlightenment and fulfillment, you will surely be moved and inspired by this journey of self-rediscovery" The documentary debuts March 18.
Rob Schenck, Ph.D., is an ordained evangelical minister and president of the Dietrich Bonhoeffer Institute, located in Washington, DC. He is the author of "Costly Grace: An Evangelical Minister's Rediscovery of Faith, Hope, and Love" (Harper Collins, June 85033, 2018). Rev.
" Just a few weeks ago, THUMP UK contributor Tom Glencross, citing how the song sampled "More Spell on You" by Eddie Johns, referred to "One More Time" as "the Daft Punk spirit incarnate" and "a rediscovery of the old, made new.
Gordon MacDonald, the exhibit's co-curator, deemed Ella the "driving force behind the rediscovery of her work and archive" (Ella herself was blunt as to why her mother had been overlooked for so long: "Because she didn't have a penis").
What is known is that black women like Tressie Souders were directing films from at least the 1920s on, and scholarship on their often neglected contributions to the art is — like this series — crucial to the continuing work of rediscovery.
The universe of his series "The Rediscovery of Man," set tens of thousands of years from now, offers a future rich in symbols and dreams, where technology has irrevocably altered the mythic underpinnings of what it means to be human.
He wrote of my dedication to the high cause of my art, my quiet reluctance to criticize an old friend, of the indignities of vanity publishing suffered without complaint, the rediscovery of a brilliant backlist comparable to the John Williams phenomenon.
Film Forum contributes to the rediscovery of the silent-screen director Lois Weber, a prolific contemporary of D. W. Griffith's who was one of the most highly regarded figures in the early film industry — and who happened to be a woman.
The format isn't important—playlist, CD, LP—it's the process of discovery and rediscovery that matters, the feeling you get when you hear "I Turn My Camera On" fade into "Do You," immediately followed by "Don't You Evah," and you get goosebumps.
Believe It offers a behind-the-scenes look at Nick&aposs unlikely path to the Super Bowl, the obstacles that threatened to hold him back, his rediscovery of his love for the game, and the faith that grounded him through it all.
BROOKLYN HISTORICAL SOCIETY: 'TRUMAN CAPOTE'S BROOKLYN: THE LOST PHOTOGRAPHS OF DAVID ATTIE' (continuing) Behind this new exhibition — 40 photographs of Capote and Brooklyn Heights taken by David Attie in 1958 — is the story of a son's rediscovery of his father's long-lost work.
BROOKLYN HISTORICAL SOCIETY: 'TRUMAN CAPOTE'S BROOKLYN: THE LOST PHOTOGRAPHS OF DAVID ATTIE' (continuing) Behind this new exhibition — 214220 photographs of Capote and Brooklyn Heights taken by David Attie in 01874 — is the story of a son's rediscovery of his father's long-lost work.
BROOKLYN HISTORICAL SOCIETY: 'TRUMAN CAPOTE'S BROOKLYN: THE LOST PHOTOGRAPHS OF DAVID ATTIE' (continuing) Behind this new exhibition — 1503 photographs of Capote and Brooklyn Heights taken by David Attie in 1958 — is the story of a son's rediscovery of his father's long-lost work.
BROOKLYN HISTORICAL SOCIETY: 'TRUMAN CAPOTE'S BROOKLYN: THE LOST PHOTOGRAPHS OF DAVID ATTIE' (continuing) Behind this new exhibition — 40 photographs of Capote and Brooklyn Heights taken by David Attie in 23 — is the story of a son's rediscovery of his father's long-lost work.
Books of The Times Two of the best reasons to be alive as a reader this decade have been the rediscovery of two American writers who published much of their best work in the 1970s and '80s: Eve Babitz and Lucia Berlin.
Scruton can no longer find worthy Communist adversaries, so at the end of the book he turns against Muslims, hoping for a "rediscovery of ourselves" by stoking fear and loathing against those who he says do not share "our" religious or political inheritance.
Each one forces an overwhelming rediscovery of just how real other people are, a confrontation with the fact that everyone's mind is cluttered with images that are incidental, almost always partly lost, affecting in ways that are subtle, unpredictable and impossible to explain.
" He also called on the faithful to "promote a culture of mercy based on the rediscovery of encounter with others, a culture in which no one looks at another with indifference or turns away from the suffering of our brothers and sisters.
Charles Darwin's theory of evolution by natural selection, the rediscovery of Gregor Mendel's laws of heredity, the cracking of the genetic code, genetic engineering, the Human Genome Project, CRISPR—all were followed by grandiose claims of the imminent total control over life's fundamental processes.
Likewise, in 2010, when a snake no one had seen since the 1930s suddenly turned up in Vietnam—a so-called Lazarus species, back from the dead of presumed extinction—its rediscovery was quickly followed by online ads touting pairs of "farmed" specimens for $1,800.
Since its surprise rediscovery in 2006, those in the inner circle of outer space activities have slowly begun to realize that O'Brien's unassuming detectors have a lot more to tell us about moondust than anyone could have imagined—except, of course, for O'Brien himself.
Brooklyn Historical Society: 'Truman Capote's Brooklyn: The Lost Photographs of David Attie' (through July 2111) Behind this new exhibition — 21212 photographs of Capote and Brooklyn Heights taken by David Attie in 75 — is the story of a son's rediscovery of his father's long-lost work.
BROOKLYN HISTORICAL SOCIETY: 'TRUMAN CAPOTE'S BROOKLYN: THE LOST PHOTOGRAPHS OF DAVID ATTIE' (through July 60633) Behind this new exhibition — 60623 photographs of Capote and Brooklyn Heights taken by David Attie in 60613 — is the story of a son's rediscovery of his father's long-lost work.
BROOKLYN HISTORICAL SOCIETY: 'TRUMAN CAPOTE'S BROOKLYN: THE LOST PHOTOGRAPHS OF DAVID ATTIE' (through July 21841) Behind this new exhibition — 210187 photographs of Capote and Brooklyn Heights taken by David Attie in 1958 — is the story of a son's rediscovery of his father's long-lost work.
Nearly a decade after his death, Jackson's image seems ready-made for rediscovery not just by a designer who never met a spangle he didn't love, but by a generation possibly primed to leave behind the backward ball caps and fitted Bonobos and sparkle.
The simultaneous rediscovery of an African-American musical form that had suffered neglect and condescension had a similar effect, and artistic innovators like Skip James and Son House belatedly received the recognition (and at least some of the money) that had long been their due.
William Onyeabor, a Nigerian musician whose self-made African electro-funk albums of the 22001s and '270s were major hits in his country and then a prized rediscovery for musicians and disc jockeys in the 21970s, died on Monday at his home in Enugu, Nigeria.
BROOKLYN HISTORICAL SOCIETY: 'TRUMAN CAPOTE'S BROOKLYN: THE LOST PHOTOGRAPHS OF DAVID ATTIE' (through July) Behind this new exhibition — 40 photographs of Capote and Brooklyn Heights taken by David Attie in 1958 — is the story of a son's rediscovery of his father's long-lost work.
He also went on to direct or collaborate on concerts, exhibitions, festivals, and film and television documentaries — including one in 2015 on his own obsession with Mahler — that prompted a critical rediscovery of the composer and a popular appreciation of his music by contemporary audiences.
Sarah Palin (R) enters America into a new phase: a burgeoning new American rather than "global" human culture; a rising heartland ethic of rustic energy and faith in the everyman and woman and the Emersonian rediscovery of who we are, free and new again in nature.
I'd name many other Mexicans, men and women, who drew more productively on surrealist, folk and indigenous vocabularies to force a new art after the revolution, including Rivera, the wily modernist Dr. Atl, the Mexico-based Englishwoman Leonora Carrington and the ripe-for-rediscovery Alice Rahon.
It's a week shy of three months since I wrote an article wondering whether fans could believe in the shock-high of the White Sox' 234-292 record, Chris Sale's 291 ERA, and Mat Latos's rediscovery of the form that had made him a valuable starting pitcher in Cincinnati.
A spiritual student of the Italian queer theorist, Mario Mieli, who argued for "the rediscovery of bodies and their fundamental communicative function, their polymorphous potential for love," Louis Fratino looks out at the world with an open heart, with the firm belief that there remains much to be discovered.
" In the memoir's most rapturous passages, which recall Albert Camus's essays on his Algerian childhood, Matar evokes his rediscovery of the Libyan landscape, the luminous Mediterranean coast and the austerity of the interior, where the earth "stood as all the unpeopled landscapes of Libya stand, clean and witnessing.
With this in mind, it stands to reason that the introduction of shared music in a relatively confined space would lead to a sort of rediscovery of our more primal selves; people who engage and interact with other people, as opposed to with an endless array of digital screens.
Mr. Greenblatt's more than a dozen books include the best-selling biography "Will in the World: How Shakespeare Became Shakespeare," and "The Swerve: How the World Became Modern," a study of the 15th-century rediscovery of the ancient Roman poet Lucretius, which won the 2012 Pulitzer Prize for nonfiction.
But those who find connections among these disparate moments will be rewarded with a rare and fragile experience: a rediscovery of the strength of narrative bonds, impossible to dissolve and difficult to forget, a miraculous substance that links the characters to one another and holds them in companionable relation.
In the latest episode of OUTSIDER, a web series that uncovers the singular minds behind the world's strangest movies, VICE tracks down Rojas, who is now living in unstable conditions in Los Angeles, to uncover the mystery behind the man, his work, and its unlikely rediscovery by cult film fanatics.
" In a 1942 radio interview, he spoke of "the rediscovery of the emotional and decorative properties of line and color by modern artists," going on to lament the effect of this on commercial culture, leading to "department stores invaded by materials decorated in medleys of color, without moderation, without meaning.
The slaves, taken from Angola in west central Africa, were on a Spanish ship bound for Vera Cruz, Mexico, until two English privateer ships attacked and took up to 60 of the Africans to Point Comfort, in what is now Hampton, Virginia said David Givens, director of archaeology at Jamestown Rediscovery.
And we pay tribute to a pair of notable musical figures: Roberta Peters, 86, a star soprano for over 35 years with the Metropolitan Opera, and William Onyeabor, 70, whose African electro-funk albums of the 1970s and '80s were a prized rediscovery for musicians and D.J.s in the 2000s.
There isn't one moment we can point to, rather it's a perfect storm of factors including plummeting American prestige, the belated rediscovery that local cultures are valuable in and of themselves, and the rise of classes with different tastes and backgrounds emerging out of the turbulence of globalization, migration and urbanization.
The rediscovery led to the 1996 album "Greasy," with Norton issuing the vinyl and Mr. Paulus's label issuing the CD. "It was a great montage of the old and the new," Ms. Linna said of that record, on which Mr. Williams was backed by the doo-wop group El Dorados.
More From LiveScience 50 Fabulous 4th of July Facts: The 13 Original Colonies 10 Epic Battles that Changed History Declaration of Independence: Summary, Text & Signers "We have a lot of world-renowned experts working with us on this," Mary Anna Hartley, a senior archaeologist with Jamestown Rediscovery Foundation, told The Washington Post.
The stones, including the Black Prince's Ruby from the Imperial State Crown, were placed in the metal box and buried below a secret exit on the orders of King George VI. The rediscovery of those mysterious details were credited to Oliver Urquhart Irvine, the librarian and assistant keeper of the Royal Archives.
Miniature Frog Species Are Among World's Smallest (Photos) In Photos: Bizarre New Species Discoveries Include 'Klingon Newt' Stunning rediscovery The Jackson&aposs Climbing Salamander is known as the "golden wonder" for its bright-yellow body, which is topped by a black streak running from its head to most of the way down its tail.
Vignes photographs are, of course, the most definitively accurate representations of a historic Palmyra, but other illustrations in the exhibition offer a glimpse of how the city may have looked — and how it was perceived by the artists and explorers who passed through it after its "rediscovery" by the West in the late 17th-century.
No less fervor, on each rediscovery, would greet the Missouri brachiopods at the Brooklyn Municipal Building, or the white blob that turns out to be a fossilized eight-inch snail in the limestone (from Indiana) lobby of the Comcast Building in Rockefeller Center, or the Cretaceous clams in the Western Union Building in Lower Manhattan.
One of the great lost innovators of the late 1960s, whose work always seems on the cusp of rediscovery, is Bill Bollinger, whose "Rope Piece" from 1968 consists of a pair of strands of hemp bolted to the floor and ceiling, stretched to the extreme and clamped together: maximum tension expressed with minimal means.
Prompted by the rediscovery of two boxes of negatives in a cupboard in her apartment in Rome, the film intersperses some of the photographs and notes from that trip with more current musings on aging, as Ms. Mangini — widely credited as Italy's first major female documentary filmmaker — creeps toward her 22018rd birthday in July.
But the album sold millions of copies, achieving the sort of transgenerational success that made it ripe for mockery in the nineties, when Sheffield was writing, and for rediscovery in the aughts, when it helped inspire the indie band Vampire Weekend, whose members were young enough to think of "Graceland," fondly, as their parents' music.
He applied his vast knowledge of music to transcribing early jazz works from recordings, most notably in his 21980 book "Ferdinand 'Jelly Roll' Morton: The Collected Piano Music," which helped fuel a rediscovery of Morton (21920-280), who had fallen out of favor but is now widely regarded as the first great jazz composer.
"How the Polynesians, sailing in canoes hewed with stone adzes and setting their course by the stars, winds and ocean swells, were able to explore and colonize their island realm has long been one of the most intriguing questions about the spread of humankind over our planet," he wrote in "Voyage of Rediscovery: A Cultural Odyssey Through Polynesia" (173).
New York might not be regarded as the most tree-friendly city with its concrete-heavy density, still it has an impressive diversity of flora, from the over 300-year-old Alley Pond Giant in Queens (a tuliptree, which gets the "T" in the Tree Alphabet), to the towering dawn redwood, a species thought extinct until its rediscovery in China in the 1940s.
A memorial to those who lost their lives in 2019 During her Paris years, Ms. Zabriskie played a central role in the rediscovery of the work of the French Surrealist photographer Claude Cahun (after buying an unidentified collage at auction on a hunch that it was a Cahun) as well as that of Georges Hugnet, the Surrealist collagist and book designer.
But standing there in the chapel last week, I had the feeling that I was seeing something I would never see again: the Sistine Chapel not just as a complete work of art, but as a complete cultural artifact, restored to its Renaissance appearance for a fleeting moment, an expression of a Christianity revitalized by the rediscovery of classical antiquity.
This cycle of praise, neglect and rediscovery is especially intense and problematic for Post-Modernist buildings because the feelings that raged about them during the style wars still rage: "Keep a few as an example of how a horrible, damaging movement set the design field back decades, maybe even a century, then level the rest," commented Jim Sowell in the online architecture magazine Dezeen in 2014.
From a middle stratum I've excavated the regenerative pleasures of rediscovery — all old books: John Updike's "Villages" (an aching reminder of the absence of that steadily remarkable literary voice); a Library of America collection of four novels by William Dean Howells (who ought to be venerated at least as much as Willa Cather, if not more); Frank Kermode's "Pieces of My Mind" (consummate reflections on subjects ranging from Don DeLillo and Raymond Carver to "Secrets and Narrative Sequence").

No results under this filter, show 283 sentences.

Copyright © 2024 RandomSentenceGen.com All rights reserved.