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"monograph" Definitions
  1. a detailed written study of a single subject, usually in the form of a short book

271 Sentences With "monograph"

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

His latest monograph ROOFTOP was recently published by Radius Books. 
No biography or monograph has been written about Inge Hardison.
Reeves shared with Lowe a monograph that he had prepared.
After this I will be working on my first monograph.
Monograph is a cloud-based project management tool designed for architects.
Currently, the FDA has approved 16 ingredients in its sunscreen monograph.
Bass are edible, and this book is not a scholarly monograph.
Halsey's work will be featured in a monograph at the museum.
He published his landmark monograph, "Sleeping by the Mississippi," in 2004.
In the final published IARC monograph, this sentence had been deleted.
Some 90 years later, the rare monograph is legendary in design circles.
H.R. Giger, the Swiss artist, has a new monograph of his work.
Gebärmaschine, 1967 The monograph looks at his paintings, drawings, and industrial designs.
There's the whole monograph on that, the notion that ... Keeping going on.
Farley's monograph of the images is out this month from Atelier Éditions.
The monograph, edited by Maya Allison, will be available in April 2019.
It's All Good, his first monograph, published in 2006, was the result.
In a recent monograph, Markov compares his love of photography to addiction.
His most recent monograph is Trading to Extinction published by Dewi Lewis.
A move that brings us closer to modernizing the OTC Monograph system.
Cost of attendance can be a "hot political issue," the monograph warns.
An electrifying book about dying that's part dreamy reminiscence, part philosophical monograph.
In conjunction with the exhibition, MOCA will publish Inka Essenhigh's first-ever monograph.
But there, sitting on Pitt's bookshelf, is an entire monograph of his work.
His latest monograph, "Architecture of an Existential Threat" documents bomb shelters in Israel.
A fully illustrated monograph, the first in the artist's career, also accompanies the exhibition.
An old biography of Lenin; an academic monograph on mid-century life in Harlem.
His latest monograph is Political Theatre, a look at the 2016 U.S Presidential election.
And last year Hatje Cantz, a German publisher, released a monograph of his work.
His latest book, Monograph, measures 18 by 13 inches and weighs over seven pounds.
But Monograph reveals how many other objects Ware created in addition to his books.
The monograph was initially released in 1977, and has long been out of print.
His first monograph, Vantage, will be published later this month by Black Dog Press.
A monograph prepared by the National Governors Association acknowledges the difficulties that its members face.
And I put this in the monograph because he taught this to me in 1982.
After his authorship of the monograph The History of Java, Raffles was knighted in 1817.
The exhibition is accompanied by a fully illustrated monograph that will be released in 2020.
Award-winning publisher Radius Books will be releasing Lundgren's second monograph, Matter, in late September.
This is Littky's third monograph, each of which has concentrated on a particular American community.
Recent scrutiny relates to IARC's Monograph on glyphosate, the most commonly used herbicide in the world.
Sacred Mirrors is also the title and subject of Alex Grey's first monograph published in 1990.
The limited-edition monograph of H.R. Giger is available to pre-order on Taschen's website now.
These photos evolved into A Beautiful Ghetto, Allen's first monograph, published in 2017 by Haymarket Books.
In Chris Ware's latest book, Monograph, he confronts his past self through various ephemera and remembrances.
In a separate, 303-page monograph, Libbrecht describes the full body of knowledge about snow crystals.
These consumers of self-care options are the reason OTC Monograph modernization efforts are so important.
In 2006, through the museum, he published an impressive monograph on the jazz photographer Hugh Bell.
Sanguinetti's upcoming monograph will continue the story of Guille and Belinda as they come of age.
" These premises are then compounded by art history's "romantic, elitist, individual-glorifying, and monograph-producing substructure.
Boyd wrote a monograph on the "forgotten" artist Nat Tate, which Bowie launched at a press event.
Her new monograph "Girl Culture" offers an empathetic perspective that humanizes rather than reduces its female subjects.
A 1972 monograph of her work became one of the best-selling photography books of all time.
A new monograph demonstrates that the director's aesthetic does not equal "mere frippery," but examines important issues.
A monograph devoted to the front matter of the American Heritage Dictionary as annotated by a proofreader?
The exhibition and its accompanying monograph are the first step in an initiative to preserve Springford's legacy.
He was especially interested in the monograph by Linus Pauling, whose work he had recently been revisiting.
The 69 images will also be reproduced in a limited-edition monograph with an essay by Kurland.
Dr. Toffolo made the discovery while completing researching for her monograph Describing the City, Describing the State.
IARC's published monograph contains a fresh statistical analysis calculation as part of its review of that study.
And in 2001, the reason why this monograph exists, in 2001 I went up to Amazon. Mm-hmm.
Her own monograph with Gigi (who modeled for the mag's cover in August!) can't be too far off.
Last year, Stewart published his series on Picher in a monograph released by the University of Oklahoma Press.
His latest is a monograph, "Turning the Flywheel", that builds on a concept from his most famous work.
" An earlier version of this article misspelled the given name of the artist of the monograph "Mosque Manifesto.
The accompanying catalog — a reprinting of Yi's first monograph — was produced on incense paper infused with the scent.
His first monograph, Transfigurations (2008), is an evolution of the modernist search for form within a primitive landscape.
In his communication, Wattenberg stressed that the monograph had been reconceived as an artist's book with fewer essays.
The young artist, who died last month at age 29, is the subject of a new monograph from TASCHEN.
In fact, if Cruz's candid new monograph is any indication, receptivity has been essential to his type foundry's success.
Her new monograph, "Festivals Are Good" ($40), documents some of the country's major music festivals, beginning with Woodstock '94.
But a monograph is not the same as seeing the real thing, which I was luckily able to do.
During that time, Rilke not only gleaned insights for his monograph, but discovered how to be a better poet.
So I was writing him a letter, saying, 'If you don't want a monograph, in what are you interested?
So this is a drug with a drug monograph being actually used for its indication, which is to provide anesthesia.
Monograph has a lot of similarities to other project management tools like Asana, but with architecture-specific features built in.
ARTS An article on Tuesday about a new monograph by Françoise Gilot misstated the surname of Ms. Gilot's daughter Aurelia.
There will be a monograph published of The Bully Pulpit images by Fall Line Press in the spring of 2019.
The draft bill – The Over-the-Counter Monograph Safety, Innovation, and Reform Act – reflects years of discussions between the Food and Drug Administration (FDA), public health groups, and industry about how best to modernize the OTC Monograph system in a way that places consumers, science, and innovation above the bureaucracy associated with the rulemaking process.
Published by Princeton Architecture Press, the monograph features 32 projects from a puppet theater at Harvard University to private modern homes.
"It broke two cranes before finally getting uprooted from its home of 300 years," Preston writes in her new monograph Forest.
I do not know if there is a monograph dedicated to this decade in the artist's career, but there should be.
In a 2012 monograph, art historian Amelia Barikin introduced the titular concept of "parallel presents" to frame the artist's visual gestures.
I recommend that you take advantage of at least two of these four opportunities, preferably pairing an exhibition with a monograph.
What the introduction does for the rest of the monograph is establish Als and Neel as companions, soulmates separated by time.
Advertise on Hyperallergic with Nectar Ads My monograph on Catherine Murphy was published in 2016, with a foreword by Svetlana Alpers.
He was the author of several books, including "Versus: An American Architect's Alternatives" (1982) and a monograph of his work (1989).
"Wait Watchers" (published as a monograph, "Watchers," in 2015 by the Magenta Foundation) caught onlookers in the act of looking ugly.
Dian Hanson, an editor of a monograph of Mr. Ren's work that was published in January by Taschen, confirmed his death.
OTC Monograph reform legislation, if enacted, will have an impact on the health of nearly every American for decades to come.
Blanchon's art continues to appear occasionally in group exhibitions, and in 2006, Visual AIDS published the definitive monograph of his work.
An extensive monograph accompanies the exhibition, which will next travel to the Musée des Arts décoratifs in Paris, opening in March.
This month, Grand Arts releases its archive in the form of a monograph titled, Problems and Provocations, Grand Arts 1995-503.
A Reuters analysis found that at least 61 of those scientists served on monograph working groups that considered their own scientific research.
Rilke, 26, took on a project as an art critic to write a German monograph on Auguste Rodin, at the time 61.
The photographer's captivating portrait series Icons, which will be published in a monograph next year, staunchly rejects both of these tired concepts.
The work spans 11 countries and 37 cities through a 12-part video series and an accompanying monograph of stories and photographs.
The monograph follows a 2014 exhibition of the images at Ground Floor Gallery and a 2015 installation at the Brooklyn Public Library.
Although outwardly handsome, the monograph lacks a Table of Contents, suggesting the gallery and/or designer have little regard for the writers.
The MoMA exhibition, "Among Friends," has been conceived by the curator Leah Dickerman as an "open monograph," to borrow her revelatory phrase.
In retrospect, I think one of the most valuable things my team helped accomplish is a monograph entitled Making Prevention a Reality.
The Aperture Foundation has published an accompanying monograph titled Kwame Brathwaite: Black is Beautiful which is scheduled for release in May 2019.
The glyphosate review in IARC's Monograph 112 runs to 92 pages; the chapter on animal studies consists of just over 10 pages.
Each monograph will be dedicated to a different contemporary painter, as if to remind us that their kind is alive and well.
But one that's in this monograph and again, I want to credit a great mentor of mine, Robert Burgelman, another professor at Stanford.
As we walk through Facebook's rooftop park, he hands me a copy of a 1986 academic monograph called From Satori to Silicon Valley.
Monograph by Chris Ware by Chris Ware (Rizzoli) $37.42 I have no idea how this massive book is only $40, but it is.
Susan Landauer, the author of the monograph, has a lot to say about this curious, idiosyncratic artist, who is well worth checking out.
Soon after, I encountered Bettina Rheims's monograph "Modern Lovers," which offered minimalist black and white portraits of early 1990s gender-non-conforming youth.
Public health groups like the American Academy of Pediatrics, American Public Health Association, and The Pew Charitable Trusts support Monograph reform as well.
Long out of print, Nancy Rexroth's IOWA, a haunting monograph of black-and-white photographs evoking her childhood in the Midwest, is reissued.
De Radiguès's script, meanwhile, is reminiscent of the curt captions in Weegee's 1945 monograph Naked City, where a shot from this incident appears.
Last year, Prager published "Silver Lake Drive," her first monograph, and had her first solo retrospective, which included her first forays into film.
And last month, the Aperture Foundation published a handsome monograph that showcases 40 of her images, with an introductory essay by Zadie Smith.
A retrospective show at MoMA the following year drew enormous crowds; the accompanying monograph has sold nearly four hundred thousand copies to date.
Democratic and Republican lawmakers along with the administration, industry, consumer groups, and public health stakeholders recognize that OTC Monograph reform is long overdue.
At the same time, Aperture is releasing a 400-page monograph, "Erwin Olaf — I Am," featuring his images starting in the early 1980s.
They said you should actually codify that idea, extend the flywheel principle from Good to Great, and so I decided to write a monograph.
The locations are on the back of the monograph, starting with Berlin on May 17, 2015 and ending with Moscow on May 16, 2016.
And then there's the publication of a major monograph [Judy Chicago: New Views, being published this month by the NMWA and Scala Arts Publishers].
In the monograph, Martin tells the writer Tom Patterson the sordid details of his life story and how he came to be St. EOM.
"Antiperspirants are over-the-counter deodorants that contain FDA-monograph-approved ingredients that interact with the sweat glands to help stop perspiration," explains Robinson.
"I often was daunted by the dusty quantities of artwork and looming questions of conservation and preservation around me," she wrote in the monograph.
I remember in '97 Michael Hoffman wanted to make a monograph of my work from the little bit of photojournalism to the family portraits.
The resulting project, published last year in a monograph titled "42nd and Vanderbilt," is named for the street corner on which Funch stationed himself.
In 2017, Prestel Books released Pics or It Didn't Happen, a shared monograph with artist Molly Soda featuring images that were banned from Instagram.
"Virginia's photographic style is unmistakable and easily recognized," Patricia Cutright, of Central Washington University, wrote in a monograph on Ms. Thoren's work in 2011.
Ms. Greenfield turned the resulting images into her first monograph, "Fast Forward," which earned her gallery representation and the attention of magazine photo editors.
The OTC Monograph system is a smart, balanced framework for regulating OTC medicines containing ingredients with a proven history of safe use and efficacy.
Today, when FDA needs to make updates to an existing monograph based on new science and data, the process can take years to complete.
Together, the exhibition and the monograph are important footnotes to a slogan that has become both a state of mind and a revolutionary movement.
The book, out now from Overlapse, is part storybook, part monograph, with Antón's photographs from her journey around Iceland alongside the tales she collected.
The resulting portraits that make up the monograph are sensual for sure but, shot from a distinctly feminine viewpoint, there's no sense of vulnerability.
Niemann devised hundreds of these visual puns, and now he's collected them—along with more work from his career—in his new monograph, Sunday Sketching.
Award-winning photographer Nish Nalbandian's debut monograph A Whole World Blind depicts the realities of Aleppo, Syria where war has become part of everyday life.
The exhibition and an accompanying monograph, Vik Muniz (Prestel), celebrate the dazzling marvels Muniz' constructs out of things like diamonds, toys, chocolate syrup, and sand.
She was a 2015 National Security Fellow at the Foundation for Defense of Democracies, where she authored a monograph on the South Korean nuclear program.
With a new retrospective monograph, Ballenesque, out October 10 from Thames & Hudson, Ballen declares for all the world to hear that he is an icon.
It's time we see reform across the finish line, and bring the OTC Monograph system into the 21st century to meet the modern consumer's needs.
The page that Mr. Jakob refers to as his manifesto had been lost years ago and was rediscovered during the process of preparing the monograph.
She began selling them at a booth in a department store in Manhattan; a monograph published by her representative, Browngrotta Arts, says she sold 10,000.
He recalled the precise date — "June 4, 1974" — when, as an undergraduate, he began what became "Protest At Selma," a scholarly monograph published in 1978.
Monograph has been used to help manage more than $125 million in projects, ranging in size from bathroom and kitchen remodeling to building large hotels.
Wilson did write a range of books before tenure, most on canonical texts: her study of suffering and death in literature; a monograph on Socrates.
Monograph is currently designed for use by architects and consultants, and includes tools to assign milestones, manage project timelines and for timesheets, billing and invoicing.
Such is the case with the regulatory system that oversees the vast majority of over-the-counter (OTC) medicines, known as the OTC Monograph system.
The California and Iceland photographs are sewn separately on either side of the hardcover monograph, so you can flip through them independently or as one.
IARC's published monograph, by contrast, inserts a fresh statistical analysis calculation on the data in male mice, and concludes that the findings were statistically significant.
"My immediate thought was that the environmental artists Christo and Jeanne-Claude, were in Hong Kong wrapping buildings," he writes in his new monograph Cocoons.
The NYUAD Art Gallery is pleased to present Zimoun's first exhibition in the Gulf, as well as publish the first book-length monograph on the artist.
In her monograph Between Women, Sharon Marcus writes about Victorian doll stories for children, which often involved children spanking, beating, and tying up sentient animate dolls.
The Frick will display about 30 pieces, and the exhibition monograph will analyze about 50; it is the first major book devoted to Gouthière since 1920.
Celebrating his individual vision is a new monograph recently put out by Lar Müllers Publishers, the first that takes us deep inside his constantly searching mind.
In their monograph, Nick Hillman, David Tandberg and Brian Sponsler point to the prevalence of policymakers preferring research that confirms their views over evidence-based research.
Recently, the duo felt the need to collect this largely unseen archive of black-and-white images into a monograph now titled, That's a Crazy One.
She cites Koolhaas's mammoth 1995 monograph "S,M,L,XL" as inspiration, in its impassioned argument for the importance of the shopping experience in modern society.
Before her passing in 2015, the photographer was able to complete her final body of work and a new monograph for Aperture titled Tiny: Streetwise Revisited .
The publication follows a 1998 monograph of Jones's images, neatly ordering the photographs by vegetable, flower, or fruit (although the majority are of the vegetable kind).
While the Monograph system has served us well, it's based on an outdated model that requires notice and comment rulemaking, an increasingly slow and cumbersome process.
Four of the paintings and two of the drawings were reproduced in the monograph, and I wrote about one of the paintings, "Clasped" (2013), at length.
Monograph is neither an autobiography nor a memoir; it is a visual history based on ephemera and remembrances, with a narrative loosely built around these objects.
He expanded that essay into a monograph he called The Farewell Dossier: Strategic Deception and Economic Warfare in the Cold War (An Insider's Untold Secret Story).
Ever an elusive figure, he was largely ignored until 1895, when art historian Wilhelm von Bode rediscovered him and published a monograph on him in 1925.
Mr. Doonan had called from Los Angeles, where he was, among other activities, promoting a monograph to commemorate the 50th anniversary of Maxfield, the boutique there.
Both Weston and Blossfeldt focused on forms inherent in nature, which Blossfeldt termed, in the title of his 1928 monograph, Urformen der Kunst (Art Forms in Nature).
Aftel believes it's the first comprehensive body of photography work on this community, but she sees the monograph as a "living document," which will grow and change.
The beauty of the fair is that it truly has something for everyone, whether a rare 1950s mag, a monograph on your favorite artist, or a surprise.
This illustrated monograph is not only a survey of Tsypin's life work but an expressive first person narrative of the artist's process and relationship to the metropolis.
Chronicle Books published his first monograph, The Art of Alex Gross, in 2006, which was followed by the publication of three other books issued by Gingko Press.
Fashionable aprons, a monograph of America and more suggestions from the editors of T. Welcome to the T List, a newsletter from the editors of T Magazine.
About two and a half months before he died, he sent me an email to say how much he liked my [2015 monograph Rethink/re-entry] book.
Also debuting in the new monograph are Ballen's paintings from the 1970s, which informed his abstract photography in Asylum of the Birds and The Theater of Apparitions.
The National Association of Student Financial Aid Administrators created a 16-page monograph with specific guidelines, emphasizing the need to devise budgets for a modest living standard.
ARTS An article on Tuesday about a new monograph by Françoise Gilot misstated the length of time that Ms. Gilot has been with the Mac-Gryder Gallery.
The monograph is out May 16 from Kehrer Verlag, and photographs from the series will be on view May 4 to June 17 at Janet Borden Inc.
Towards the end of the monograph there is a reference to an eyewitness account of the movement by the artist Hans Richter, one of Dada's major proponents.
"Detroit drove me out for my sins of wanting more of a critique through my work," he says in a conversation with Harris included in the monograph.
Remembering how Lucy Lippard put Hesse's notebooks to good use in her classic 1976 monograph, I was hoping for a rich trove of reflections on her art.
It was not until last fall, after he and his colleagues were finishing up their studies for the monograph, that he remembered the work at the Nelson-Atkins.
"He worked through his horrors, and you feel that," says Andreas Hirsch, an art historian who has written an essay in Taschen's new $900 monograph of Giger's work.
" As Jayne Merkel, who wrote the Eero Saarinen monograph, told Paul Makovsky at Metropolis, in "a way the TWA terminal is Saarinen's pedestal chair turned into a building.
But while whole careers have been spent tracing the origins of human self-awareness, the lowly butt cheek has to this point not warranted even a short monograph.
His monograph on the language of World War I appeared in the journal American Speech, and he is editor of the Random House Historical Dictionary of American Slang.
"Karl said, 'The last thing I want to have in my life is a monograph about my work, so go to hell—I don't want it,' " Steidl recalls.
The first monograph dedicated to Brathwaite's work, titled " Black Is Beautiful " (a phrase that Brathwaite and the Grandassa Models helped popularize) will be released on May 1, 2019.
This year, we also see the first-ever published monograph on Wautier, compiled by Stighelen; there around 30 known extant works, though the number is disputed among historians.
The following excerpt from Taschen's monograph on the late H.R. Giger is by Andreas J. Hirsch, a photographer and writer who's curated multiple exhibitions on H.R. Giger's work.
This man, Neil, is a historian who has quit writing his fifth monograph in favor of a "hybrid piece," a novelized history of a time before the Cataclysm.
Nearly four decades later, that manifesto and the jewelry it inspired are the subject of "Ripe Fruit," a monograph published in October by the German publisher Hatje Cantz.
While the title of the monograph, recently published by Overlapse, suggests some organic presence, the images are of plastic trash that Barker collected on the shores of Ireland.
The monograph, published in November by Powerhouse Books, concentrates on Sandler's photography from 1977, when he was gifted a Leica camera, to the weeks before September 11, 2001.
"The time seemed right to find a home in which to establish a permanent professional opera company in Detroit," he was quoted as saying in the 20143 monograph.
Monograph, a startup working on cloud-based software that makes project and cost management easier for architects, announced today that it has raised $1.9 million in seed funding.
INDOORS This low-slung midcentury-modern house was designed by the architect Doug Rucker and is currently owned by a couple working on a monograph about his work.
"Engineers make structures for specific uses, to support something, to hold something, to do something," he told Eleanor Heartney for her monograph "Kenneth Snelson: Forces Made Visible" (4003).
Within the year, Matalon completed Olive Juice, a photographic monograph made in collaboration with artist Damien Maloney that the pair have been working on for over two years.
The new monograph from the San Francisco-based photographer features over 70 images of discarded library books, each posed against a black background for a post-withdrawal portrait.
"Antiperspirants are over-the-counter deodorants that contain FDA-monograph-approved ingredients that interact with the sweat glands to help stop perspiration," explains cosmetic chemist Ron Robinson of Beautystat.com.
The C.C.P. [Chinese Communist Party] invested over 200 billion renminbi [$30 billion] in it, and yet there is not one book that analyzes it, except for my upcoming monograph.
It seems to me that an adventuresome curator with institutional backing (do they still exist?) ought to give her a show and publish a monograph to go with it.
From 1990 to 2001, Dr. Connell was on the editorial board of The Contraception Report, a bimonthly monograph that analyzed obstetrics research and was delivered to 70,000 doctors nationwide.
"She was an avant-garde artist whose most avant-garde work was her own life," said the art historian Ozlem Gulin Dagoglu, who is writing a monograph on her.
Out this month — to accompany a show at the McEvoy Foundation for the Arts in San Francisco — is a beautiful monograph of the work of the photographer Michael Jang.
But, largely due to a slowing of notice and comment rulemaking processes across the entirety of government, the Monograph system has become cumbersome and essentially ground to a halt.
In A Peculiar Paradise: Florida Photographs, Benn's new monograph from powerHouse Books, he recalls: Cocaine cowboys were glamorized on television in Miami Vice and at the cinema in Scarface.
Frances F. Denny: Six years ago, I was researching my family's ancestry and history in New England for a project that became my 2016 monograph, Let Virtue Be Your Guide.
It is high time for a large monograph on his work — larger than the one published on the occasion of his traveling retrospective in 2001, which is under 175 pages.
Bowler recently wrote a book—Blessed: A History of the American Prosperity Gospel—that has been hailed as the first monograph tracing the history of the prosperity gospel in America.
There are so many memorable works in this show, I wish a comprehensive monograph existed on Smith's work — say 200 images to show the diversity of what she has achieved.
As Richard Rothstein has shown in his superb monograph, "Holding Accountability to Account," tying high stakes to measurable goals affects behavior in negative ways in every field, not just education.
Mr. Roncoroni has backed the recent publication of a monograph, "Lempad of Bali: The Illuminating Line," very nearly a catalogue raisonné providing a comprehensive account of Lempad's works and influences.
"When I started talking to the founder of Zioxla, about doing a monograph and sharing some of my portfolio, our conversations kept coming back to the cat work," he adds.
In 1972, Japanese photographer Daido Moriyama released a monograph titled Shashin yo Sayonara, or Bye Bye Photography -- a rebellious series of images thought to be unacceptable by the established medium.
" A new monograph (from Gibbs Smith) by Adele Cygelman about a co-designer of the building's original interiors, Arthur Elrod, describes the kitchen and other rooms as embodying "Afrocentric Modernism.
Now 58, he has a ravishing quasi-monograph out from Flammarion ($150) that shows the art works he's made for an American collector's hunting lodge in Normandy, among other designs.
Elias Sime: Tightrope will be accompanied by the first monograph focused on Sime's work, which features contributions by Tracy L. Adler, Meskerem Assegued, Karen E. Milbourne, and Ugochukwu-Smooth C. Nzewi.
" In a subsequent email to Reuters, he said the risk estimates and corresponding scientific papers were part of the monograph discussions from "the very first working drafts and through all revisions.
One who never personally encountered Nochlin and read only her eye-opening books (for example, Realism, and her monograph, Courbet) might not know that she was a performative lecturer and cutup.
"For my personal work, I preferred strange, edgy subjects," he wrote in his 228 monograph "Sidetripping," sometimes described as a countercultural answer to the landmark work "The Americans," by Robert Frank.
Ware should always be crowded and a little bit heavy and uncomfortable, (as I felt carrying Monograph home on the subway trying not to hit fellow riders with the sharp corners).
An exhibition at the Picasso Museum in Barcelona last year explored the importance of cuisine in the artist's work; in June La Fabrica collected that material in "Picasso's Kitchen", a monograph.
It will soon publish Synagogues of Ukraine: Volhynia, a monograph by Dr. Sergey Kravtsov and Dr. Vladimir Levin that covers 39 extant and 302 vanished synagogues in the Eastern European country.
Monograph was designed to be easy to use, with an emphasis on the onboarding process so firms are encouraged to switch from traditional project management methods, like spreadsheets, to the software.
Hewing to academic methodology, the monograph makes for rather dry reading, but it contains revelations that have led to controversial new attributions, irking some in the museum world and pleasing others.
Aside from Freud's glowing 1884 monograph on cocaine, "Über Coca," in which he described his research on cocaine — and his addiction to it — there was little modern research on the drug.
The "romantic, elitist, individual-glorifying, and monograph-producing substructure" that Nochlin described, remains the stock-in-trade of the art industry, especially in regards to the marketing of artists and exhibitions.
She and her husband became close friends with Giacometti, and in 1987 they published a major monograph on the artist, with photographs of the sculpture by Herbert and a text by Mercedes.
Among the big SUV or crossover reveals expected at the New York International Auto Show this week are the Infiniti QX80 Monograph concept, a redesigned Lincoln Navigator and a new Buick Enclave.
Documented most prominently in his monograph Stoopz (2010), was a rickety brick area on the Manhattan side of the Brooklyn Bridge, confusingly dubbed the Brooklyn Banks to outsiders and out-of-towners.
As the literary scholar George Boulukos argued in a 2008 monograph, the trope of the "grateful slave" emerged in the eighteenth century as a crucial part of the ideological justification for slavery.
Then again, so is the owner of any designated landmark, said Barry Bergdoll, an art history professor at Columbia University who wrote the foreword to "Building Seagram," a monograph by Phyllis Lambert.
The author of a monograph on the Brazilian composer Heitor Villa-Lobos, she is a musical connoisseur with eclectic tastes (she likes Queen as well as samba) and a rigorous, passionate ear.
Hannah W. Blunt, a former curator at the Colby museum, pointed out in a 2014 monograph that Mr. Langlais felt that the quality of his artwork declined during his New York years.
Ms. Stein, the monograph says, designed several puppets for Ms. Lewis, who would later in the 20143s achieve national fame with Lamb Chop, Charlie Horse and the rest of her puppet pals.
"Ethel Stein did not shun an audience; rather, she sidestepped the pervasive marketing focus of others," Jack Lenor Larsen, a noted textile designer and author, wrote in the introduction to the monograph.
By the end of the year, the company plans to start releasing new versions of Monograph that can be used by structural, electrical and mechanical engineers, as well as other licensed professionals.
Around 400 B.C., an anonymous physician compiled a monograph on the subject titled "On the Sacred Disease," which was meant to dispel the apparently widespread belief that epilepsy had some magical aspect.
Congress needs to know what role the NIEHS has played in all of this, to wit: What role did the NIEHS and other U.S. government employees have in the IARC monograph process?
On Campus More than 25 years ago, at the height of the effort to pass hate speech codes on college campuses, I wrote a monograph about how to do it without censorship.
Among the marquee names participating are Chris Ware — who will discuss his new collection Monograph — and Emil Farris — who will talk about her hugely popular debut book My Favorite Thing Is Monsters.
The drag queen is one of the many LGBTQ subjects who populate Ka-Man Tse's photography in her portfolio-prize winning exhibition at Aperture Foundation celebrating the artist's first monograph, narrow distances (2018).
The longtime cartoonist helped assemble a career-spanning monograph (2012's The Art of Daniel Clowes: Modern Cartoonist) as well as last year's deluxe collection of his influential '90s alt-comic series Eightball.
Thanks to the video, Mr Chan's neologism (best translated as "boing") set off a storm of online metalinguistic analysis, as David Moser describes in his monograph on the Chinese language, "A Billion Voices".
The first thing I noticed was a monograph on Edwin Dickson lying open on a desk by the front door of his office on campus, which, I learned, was also where he painted.
"I have a secret to tell you," said Mr. Whalen, an author of "City Living: Apartment Houses by Robert A. M. Stern Architects," a mammoth monograph published last month by the Monacelli Press.
According to IARC, three EPA scientists – Mathew Martin, Peter Egeghy, and Catherine Eiden — and one scientist from the National Institute of Environmental Sciences (NIEHS), Gloria Jahnke, all helped write the controversial glyphosate monograph.
"Flowers are the expression of the love life of plants," Tasker wrote of his photographs, as former curator and art historian Bonnie Yochelson recounts in her introduction to a monograph of his images.
For example, the FDA requires that producers use pharmaceutical-grade ingredients (ethanol or isopropyl alcohol in an aqueous solution, glycerol, hydrogen peroxide, and distilled water) and follow an exact recipe, called a monograph.
Paul Anderer, who teaches Japanese literature and film at Columbia University, has written a well-researched study that is part biography of Kurosawa, part cultural history of modern Japan and part film monograph.
One example, Gertrude Stein's 1948 monograph on Picasso, plays with perception: You can't tell if the textured brushwork of the painting on the cover is meant to show Wolfe's hand or imitate Picasso's.
You can almost always judge a book by its cover if it was created by Chip Kidd, the Knopf veteran whose second monograph cuts an impressive slice of book publishing and design history.
Under mounting pressure to increase visitor numbers, museums are opting more and more for the popular blockbuster or single-artist monograph show over more complex thematic exhibitions that need extensive new research and development.
Darboven leaves herself out of it, as Dan Adler writes in his monograph, Hanne Darboven: Cultural History 22006–1983 (2009): […] Cultural History is relentlessly resistant to being read in terms of an overriding system.
While OTC medicines make up much of Americans' medicine cabinets, the process for regulating the majority of these medicines, referred to as the OTC Monograph system, hasn't been updated in more than 40 years.
Other monograph panelists with undisclosed conflicts include:  Others, like Aaron Blair, Isabelle Baldi, Matthew Ross and Ivan Rusyn, frequently collaborate in activist conferences, co-publish papers with activists, or publicly lobby to ban pesticides.
From her personal collections, Wyatt is including three of Yves Saint Laurent's "Love" prints — sent as New Year's cards between 1970 and 2000 — as well as a signed monograph by Helmut Newton, another old friend.
According to the art historian Deepak Ananth, who has written a major monograph on Singh, Chagall's ungrounded, floating figures played a role in Singh's conception of the relationship between her figures and the surrounding space.
Signed and sent by Kathryn (Kate) Guyton, the IARC staffer responsible for the glyphosate review, the email said IARC "does not encourage participants to retain working drafts or documents after the monograph has been published".
A monograph of his word paintings was published by designer Todd Oldham, he made music videos for Peter Gabriel and the Smashing Pumpkins, and he's the subject of a 280 the documentary Beauty Is Embarrassing.
DF by Prem Krishnamurthy, in which the local designer and curator presents his genre-bending, interactive app, a create-your-own-adventure performative monograph that changes according to the whims and desires of its audience.
SHANGHAI (Reuters) - An old review of an academic monograph on agrarian revolutionaries in 1930s China is hardly a political third rail in Beijing today, even by the increasingly sensitive standards of the ruling Communist Party.
With the publication of a lavish monograph, ROBERTO ­BURLE MARX: Brazilian Modernist (Jewish Museum / Yale University, $21982), the work of this great midcentury landscape architect, who invented the modernist tropical garden, will become better known.
Here are six recent choices: With fans like Rihanna, Madonna and Catherine Deneuve, and a 20-year career, it is surprising that "Lydia Courteille: Extraordinary Jewellery of Imagination and Dreams" is the jeweler's first monograph.
If drafted correctly, a modern OTC Monograph system can create a surge of innovation that will increase the choices available to consumers, protect the choices they already have and continue to allow transparent price competition.
In a news release by the university, Ms. Freiman said, "I would like to turn my attention to some projects that I had to put on hold," including a monograph on the sculptor Claes Oldenburg.
In fact, "Looking for Lorraine" is something between a fan's notes and an academic monograph, less an unpacking of the archive to reveal the life than an exercise in putting the archive in historical context.
" A project nearly a quarter-century in the making, this monograph attempts to provide a comprehensive revisiting of the man so many know only as the painter of the "Mona Lisa" and the "Last Supper.
A full-fledged excavation of the book's footnotes, "None Dare Call It Reason," was published in monograph form in 1965 by Julian Foster, a political science professor at California State University, Fullerton, and five colleagues.
"(This) does not show that coffee is certainly safe ... but there is less reason for concern today than there was before," Dana Loomis, the deputy head of IARC's Monograph classification department told a news conference.
" A title like "The Book of the Pearl," published by Macmillan in 1908, might be found within arm's reach of a monograph on the Modernist jeweler Arthur George Smith and another surveying sparkling "Hollywood Jewels.
The resulting monograph, "LeGaspi," a deeply eccentric amalgam of homage, personal memoir and reminiscences by people like the Kiss vocalist Paul Stanley, the actor Juan Fernandez and the model Pat Cleveland, has just been published.
His work will be on display at the Photography Show presented by Aipad in New York from April 3 to April 7, and a monograph is scheduled to be published by Radius Books this fall.

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