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"poetically" Definitions
  1. in a way that is like or suggests poetry, especially because it shows imagination and deep feeling
"poetically" Synonyms

236 Sentences With "poetically"

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

This process is known, almost poetically, as lifting to failure.
Less poetically, he might have added market meddling to the mix.
Or so poetically captured for television, thanks to cinematographer Antonio Calvache.
Opportunity is stranded in the dark, rather poetically, in Perseverance Valley.
No less poetically, he was also a pioneer of homosexual photography.
They poetically rhyme exquisite engineering with brute materiality, élan with solemnity.
As more and more of Krasznahorkai's œuvre has been translated—poetically by
Poetically, the video cuts off right before the end of the song.
The professions of love and the act of love are poetically described.
As seems both poetically appropriate and hyperbolic, I did not make it.
In between numbers, he reflects poetically on "trauma" and the creative process.
"Now that land is owned by one negro," Perry said, quite poetically.
" Union adds poetically, "The person that was raped at 19 died that day.
"We'll keep silence to listen to our own bodies," the group poetically proclaimed.
Taken together, these were four of the more poetically rendered shows in recent memory.
Joni Mitchell Another Canadian with a broad, diverse and poetically charged body of work.
"Outside the EU, the world is our oyster", a Brexiteer once put it poetically.
They're so good, in fact, we've already waxed poetically about them earlier this year.
While most of us use airport codes only functionally, Nasser Hussain uses them poetically.
At the same time, almost poetically, I was reading "Personal History" by Katharine Graham.
If you're a creative writer who can't poetically describe the rain, you're in trouble.
But he periodically returned to pastel to create small, vibrantly colorful and poetically captivating images.
More than recycling or repairing material objects, Sedimentations' assemblages poetically preserve — even document — their traces.
"It's not that hard to be poetically inspired when you're living in the trees," Krug says.
Democracy, Mr Jeyenbekov said poetically in his inauguration speech, "has two friends: first freedom, second responsibility".
Poetically, one of the best ways we can help ourselves starts with caring for each other.
Or, if you are more poetically inclined, what is the stuff that dreams are made of?
"I make dead people, people who I don't know, beautiful," he explains a little too poetically.
Has any choreographer answered musical minimalism so poetically and memorably as Robbins did in "Glass Pieces"?
Poetically, it's an act that directly parallels the downfall of her father, the Mad King Aerys.
As Autostraddle put it: When we talk poetically about marriage, we say that two become one.
He says:  … I listened to CNN and poetically wrote down soundbites that I heard during the broadcast.
Not if we're invested in that "shining city on a hill" that Ronald Reagan so poetically evoked.
We swept along the riverside hand in hand, Sean poetically, urgently, declaring his affection between frantic kisses.
There was also a poetically overgrown private garden busy with tangerine, bitter orange, persimmon and pomegranate trees.
In her BBW series, the acronym finds its way, rather poetically, into the titles of the work.
Their collective statement on the album poetically summarizes the torment suffered and the subsequent escape from it.
Yet, there is a poetically conflicting relationship between the undergarments and the hard-edged words sewn into them.
Elsewhere in the expansive show, the artist poetically alludes to issues of climate change, neoliberalism, and free capitalism.
Some of her earlier works, like the autobiographical "Forever," are clearly factual, however poetically the facts are rendered.
A few observers — notably the choreographer Frederick Ashton and the critic André Levinson — analyzed her salient qualities poetically.
Poems are born out of quarrels and quandaries because thinking poetically is very closely related to thinking critically.
It's simply to bring that quality that is latent in the work, to bring it poetically to life.
Joiri Minaya presents a series of color photographs along with poetically descriptive texts that reflect on the immigrant experience.
I've admired a number of Mr. Neenan's works, and have often found him to show a poetically original imagination.
She has switched her backup from acoustic to electronic and her lyrics from intimately, poetically personal to starkly political.
We expected to solemnly tip out a reasonable amount of ashes that would blow poetically away in the wind.
Tesser, by the way is the verb form of "tesseract," a phenomenon rendered more poetically by the movie's title.
Was that a challenge for you and how did you go about poetically retelling actual events in his life?
When "The Handmaid's Tale" was published, in 23, some reviewers found Atwood's dystopia to be poetically rich but implausible.
" But she is also capable of arresting aperçus: "There is no writer more poetically articulate about irritation than Updike.
At the New York City premiere of Ocean's 8, Williams slicked his client's bundles back — and laid those edges poetically.
Jane poetically insinuates that Claire is going to be assassinated if she continues on this course by dropping a plate.
Sachs suggested the story was 'poetically transfigured,' Coates flatly considered it 'tommyrot,' and Moller gently suggested Humboldt's accounts were 'tales.
Humbler but poetically affecting is a "whimsy" carved evidently from a single block of wood just under a foot tall.
It's hard to believe that a narrator so poetically expressive would not have more agency, more drive on the page.
" — STEPHEN COLBERT "He went on rather poetically, 'The irony is today is the day I am getting my freedom back.
Ridiculous though it may sound, Davis poetically probes her subjects, revealing how easy it is to unfix established modes of thought.
Although, this perhaps makes him the most at home in the One Tree Hill universe; he poetically suits its unscientific nature.
It poetically captured the current state of 53G: The future was staring right at me but I couldn't quite access it.
Chaykin wanted this process to poetically replicate what happens in your head and phone when you decide to use an emoji.
He develops new systems and shares his results on a blog where he also poetically expounds on bugs, failures, and conceptual complications.
He allows the water color swatches that stand in for characters and landscapes to create a dreamlike world that appears poetically endless.
"Calendar (X)" (219) and "threes (calendar)" (26) do not visually read as calendars but are all the more poetically delightful for it.
Coming from Ned, that sentence seemed to be nothing more than a father poetically telling his daughter that a family should stick together.
In it, her fascination ranges from the 228 muscles in the head of a caterpillar to the poetically beautiful migration of monarch butterflies.
I'm trying to do it poetically, so there has to be a rhythm to it, there has to be a weave to it.
Poetically, it is America's victory in war and the establishment of Phelps' idealized "American century" which creates an opportunity for avarice and greed.
Clarke's poetically compressed language hurtles joyfully along, while Rudd's illustrations, made on cardboard boxes with spirited swaths of paint, burst with irrepressible life.
An earlier version of this article incorrectly — but poetically fittingly — referred to the phrase that replaces "Generation Z" in a text-swapping extension.
And Raegan Cure from Michigan (School) wrote poetically about nature: Slowly, the empty boat drifted ashore, ash settling from the dull, grey sky.
Gaye Su Akyol has revived a style of music once thought deeply uncool, and she uses it to comment poetically on her country.
But every moment of this dramatically concentrated and poetically detailed work reveals the social selves and the souls of its characters, especially the women.
Goldblum explains that the VICE Studios film, directed by Rick Alverson, is "based, extrapolated from, and then sprung poetically off of" a true story.
In this vein, late in his career, he made the dangerous business of whaling the subject of four stirringly atmospheric and poetically thrilling paintings.
One brief vocal quartet was unlike anything I've heard, its layers and harmonies apparently suspending time; a solo by Mr. Vicenti was poetically reflective.
I've been thinking about these themes for a long, long time, and I've been writing about them fictionally and poetically for a long time.
In his cult classic 1936 novella, Interlinear to Cabeza de Vaca, Haniel Long poetically reimagines the travel narrative of the eponymous Spanish colonial explorer.
Woodley clarified his comments on "The Hollywood Beatdown" ... waxing poetically about why there's no better feeling in the world than knocking an opponent out cold.
Poetically referred to as the "Kingdom in the Sky," it looks like a freckle in the middle of South Africa from a world map view.
Well-known for poetically capturing various — often marginalized — subcultures, her upcoming show at the MOCA PDC focuses instead on the life of one single individual.
" Or as he put it more poetically: "The people who are crazy enough to think they can change the world are the ones who do.
Earlier this year, a film came out titled Embrace of the Serpent, which graphically and poetically captured the ravages of 1900s colonialism in the Amazon.
Solange "Cranes in the Sky" (Saint/Columbia) Sometimes there's no evading heavy emotions, as Solange poetically admits over an impeccable, low-simmering funk groove. 9.
The cultural elite on the coasts waxes poetically on the benefits of free trade, but no other country allows unfettered imports like the United States.
Though the film is poetically constructed, accompanied by Carlos Gardel's melancholic intonations, it provides Alborta the space to divulge certain aspects of his image's construction.
By acting as magnets for the refraction of natural and artificial light and atmospheric condensation, the bottles poetically retraced the gallery's 24-year exhibition history.
Another classic is Raya Martin's Independencia (2009), a story set in the early 20th century that poetically reflects on the Philippines' own struggle with independence.
Quite poetically, one can't get to Chicago's "The Dinner Party," a permanent fixture of these galleries, without seeing some part of We Wanted a Revolution.
Even the poetically feeble idea of them being all man-made is undercut by the presence of an aluminum rat stuck between the beast's hind legs.
" An anecdote from growing up in Birmingham poetically ties the works together: "For the past two-to-three years, I have been examining two main ideas.
That way, all are able to appreciate the artist's fascination with the surrendered, languid female form, as it poetically corresponds to a myriad of erotic desires.
As for how they function poetically in "The Ministry of Utmost Happiness," Indian storytelling, from the Mahabharata onward, has tended to favor fantasy, transformation, high color.
In a podcast, Nate DiMeo of the Memory Palace poetically considers the inner life of this woman in this room, a space both quiet and lavish.
You asked if I find it sad or poetically satisfying that two men's sexism caught on a recording might propel the first woman into the presidency.
Omagari follows Muroga's forward with a preface that ups the ante, focusing on the 8×8-pixel plane, which he poetically likens to an infinity symbol.
The zine-maker known as Instigator found these Polaroids and created his own narrative for each that range from highly-believable scenarios to poetically existential fantasies.
Maya challenges her boyish applicants poetically, sexually and finally with offers of intimacy, but the editing all too often settles into a submissive back and forth.
Elliot's reminiscences last week about the Wishing Game poetically paralleled the wishing game Angela's been playing all season, and seemed to usher her back toward reality.
As global warming intensifies, the loss of our wild, undeveloped lands and natural ecosystems has been represented literally and poetically in the works of many contemporary artists.
Previously, "the Golden Boy" has been disqualified twice for "unsportsmanlike conduct," and he poetically admits to being the fighting equivalent of temperamental Russian ballet dancer Vaslav Nijinsky.
On the poetically frank "Dollar Days," McCaslin's two renegade solos pick up where Bowie's vocals die down, carrying the narrative arc ("I'm dying to(o)") without words.
The texts describe, among other topics, mathematical formulas and the misdeeds of gods; poetically lament the deaths of livestock; and record regulations for taxation, divorce and prostitution.
But more thought seemed to have gone into the sound editing of the actors' voices than into creating sequences that are either dramatically compelling or poetically evocative.
Houston-based photographer Traci Matlock captures this overlap in her work, which ranges in tone from raw and explicit to poetically vague, though always challenges the viewer.
Poetically, the simplicity of the music and the production allowed space for the poetry to shine and be more complex than in any of the previous records.
Even HBO's comedy "Veep" has this problem — it's poetically foul-mouthed, but has the charming conceit that the characters need to keep their obscenities from the public.
In a sense, she said, her piece is about "the mind-boggling pace we're all moving at now," but her imagery pushes back poetically against the overload.
Drawings and objects are loosely and poetically grouped by themes including Southern California landscapes (palms, highways, etc.), farm animals (dogs, cows, etc.), and death (skulls, ghosts, etc.).
I asked if this would be the year I get rich, and in response I cast hexagram 62 and was advised, poetically, about humility, sincerity and frugality.
Inc. (HAWT), brings traveling exhibitions, performances, lectures, and educational presentations throughout the US. Founded in 1972, HAWT's aim is gender justice and anti-bullying education, explicitly and poetically.
Pupils must study an impressively wide range of subjects: science buffs have to study French literature and philosophy, and even the most poetically minded must grapple with science.
No detail was too small when they drew up a master plan for the park, now dubbed, not very poetically, the "Three Parallel Rivers of Yunnan Protected Area".
At that point, the Backbone Trail would also quite poetically intersect with the Los Angeles River trail that's aiming for completion of its 51-mile greenway by 2020.
It speaks poetically and fiercely to the idea that we may never "understand" one another, and that this fact may sometimes best be accepted and acted upon accordingly.
The Mamba delivered his performance on "The Tonight Show Starring Jimmy Fallon" -- and with a soft bongo beat in the background, Kobe waxed poetically about Steve vs. Stefan.
Orange Is The New Black star Uzo Aduba put her feelings poetically ("Kendrick Lamar is The Truth"), while Wale took the blunter route ("Kendrick fucked it up #damn").
Because of his grief, the note said, Whitworth poetically killed himself with the same drug a month later, in the same spot he had dumped his dead friend.
But I'm not a very poetically inflected writer like Coates is, so to try and engineer a shift in my mode of writing, sometimes I'll sift through that too.
"Poetically engaging Bucky's existing structure in a visual dance, interacting much like the sun and the moon, the Biosphere is no longer alone; it has a partner," he said.
Having won, it has already moved on and is now agitating for open carry with no permits or other limitations or, as its backers poetically call it, constitutional carry.
Prostitute Laundry is not popular because of its graphic sexual content (which there is plenty of), but more so because of Shane's ability to write so poetically about humanity.
And then, come opening night, he will climb atop a bar or a table and dole out praise in poetically turned phrases that are somehow both sincere and superlative.
The vulgarities never reach the poetically baroque excesses of the HBO show "Deadwood," but they are vivid enough to put distance between them and genre exemplars like John Wayne.
"The Cloister" poetically pingpongs between Abélard's abbey in Saint-Denis in the 1100s, elsewhere in France during and after World War II, and Upper Manhattan in the early 1950s.
The words the artist uses poetically refer to the destruction of a culture by the Spanish, when they conquered and colonized the Tlahuica nation in what is now Morelos, Mexico.
Namibia has been called the Land God Made in Anger — or, less poetically, the Gates of Hell — but I wonder if the Land God Forgot About might be more accurate.
To focus on sustainability in agriculture, the Council collected 54,000 liters of festival urine, calling the project "from piss to pilsner"—or "beer cycling," as it was so poetically named.
"When called upon to memorialise a faulty bridge, McGonagall constructs another," writes Mr Lerner, as he dissects McGonagall's swirling metrical confusion with poetically informed glee across a number of pages.
Besides being very pretty to stare at, the gown embodies this poetically fine line between time-honored techniques and tech-harnessing machine work that Manus x Machina aims to underscore.
Back to the moment: If our first female president will be propelled into office in part by outrage about male sexual misbehavior, would you find that depressing, or poetically satisfying?
"When I need my Bayreuth ears, I have to cut my normal ears off, and then someone puts the new ears on," said Mr. Thielemann, who tends to speak poetically.
Nearly everyone in media condemned the president's defense of white supremacists last night, and none more poetically than Jimmy Kimmel, who urged the president's remaining supporters to let him go.
His rst album, Dread Beat an' Blood (1978), was based on his second book, of the same name, and chronicled black British life in terms both poetically rich and journalistically detailed.
Poetically, their album release date falls one day before the March for our Lives, organized by other industrious members of Gen Z, who are also coming to save us from ourselves.
A short French documentary about the flight "Alone in the Mauritanian sky," as a French film about the flight poetically put it, Concorde 210 hurtled east along the path of totality.
He talks poetically about the five watery zones: "sunlit" means down to 200 metres; "twilit", descending to 1,000; "midnight" to 4,000; "abyssal" to 6,000; and finally "hadal", meaning the deepest trenches.
" Marine Corps Sergeant Andrew Wark put it more poetically: "It's like being inside a condom in the Amazon forest but the only one getting fucked is the poor schmuck wearing it.
" Scottish rugby legend Nelson Henderson put the same notion poetically when he said, "The true meaning of life is to plant trees, under whose shade you do not expect to sit.
But what right did I have to doubt the boy, what right did I have to want him to express his heartbreak more poetically or die more realistically, like Michael Furey?
Five Feet Apart acknowledges the hard truths of fighting a losing battle—the depression, the anxiety—and it captures the joyful junctures of this chronic illness alongside the hardest moments poetically.
The big ovations go to "Rubies" and "Diamonds," with their spectacle and virtuosity; but hundreds of ballet devotees will tell you that it's the poetically mysterious "Emeralds" they love the most.
I'm going to go with poetically satisfying, were it to happen — it would suggest that sometimes, when it really matters, justice does eventually catch up to those who abuse their power.
Ward writes honestly, poetically, of her Mississippi and the seemingly unconnected deaths of five young men in just four years — beginning with her brother, killed by a drunken driver in 2000.
In sum, A.I. and gene editing promise (or is it threaten?) to redefine what counts as human and what it means to be human, philosophically as well as poetically and politically.
The film powerfully and poetically tells of their love and their imagined future through the fragments he left behind — a voice message, a letter, a dog tag, a hat, a receipt.
Dimayuga says that she didn't like persimmons as a child, instead (and rather poetically) developing a taste for the fruit as an adult, only when she strayed far from the tree.
At that point, with the Iron Throne rather poetically reduced to a molten heap, the finale shifted into another gear, one that featured some superb moments and callbacks but felt less impressive.
He hoped to heal troubled souls — poetically evoking his traumatic Vietnam experiences to fellow war-weary veterans, reminding impoverished Indians whose future had held little promise of their heritage as Anishinaabe people.
The egg is a traditional Chinese snack, often called (poetically, if inaccurately) a 217,000-year-old egg, preserved for a few weeks or months in lye or slaked lime, salt and tea.
"Poetically, I love to understand the veil as a protection shield as it covers almost everything and provides small loopholes to look to the outside but also to the inside," she said.
Instead, Mr. Guadagnino leans on beauty, as when Elio's father poetically speaks to an increasingly agitated Oliver about the "ageless ambiguity" of some male statues ("as if they're daring you to desire them").
Buttigieg is authentically, unapologetically, and poetically a proud gay man who is not afraid to stand up in front of the entire United States of America and say that is who he is.
Fun fact: before the computer and electronics companies moved in, the region was poetically known as the "Valley of Heart's Delight" in the early 1900s for the fruit orchards that populated its fields.
Just as Baudelaire was a writer who befriended and championed visual artists to validate his aesthetic theories and poetic objectives, Moreau is best understood as the most poetically inclined visual artist of any era.
Poetically satisfying though such polygenic high-jinks might be, in general mouse research has tended to go a gene at a time: "That's what we can do easily," says Nadia Rosenthal, JAX's scientific director.
He went on to forge a singular, nearly 60-year career of eccentric invention in painting, sculpture and photography, but he periodically returned to pastel to create small, vibrantly colorful and poetically captivating images.
He went on to forge a singular, nearly 8453-year career of eccentric invention in painting, sculpture and photography, but he periodically returned to pastel to create small, vibrantly colorful and poetically captivating images.
He went on to forge a singular, nearly 229023-year career of eccentric invention in painting, sculpture and photography, but he periodically returned to pastel to create small, vibrantly colorful and poetically captivating images.
He went on to forge a singular, nearly 173-year career of eccentric invention in painting, sculpture and photography, but he periodically returned to pastel to create small, vibrantly colorful and poetically captivating images.
Their improbable collision course began somewhat poetically 20 years ago when, as a high school senior, Buttigieg won the John F. Kennedy Profile In Courage essay contest for a piece he wrote on Sanders.
This latest entry in their sprawling discography is anchored by the band's customary slabs of slow-moving, magisterial doom, tempered with Bryan Funck's eternally rabid snarls, poetically nihilistic lyrics, and overarching, ego-killing melancholia.
As she so poetically points out, like many other countries long handed off from one colonial power to the next, the true identity of the place is one that's continually recreated, lost, and altered.
A messy looking plate of cholesterol holding on to the divine flavors of both the humblest beings of the land and sea," poetically waxed Lu. "It's sweet, salty, and usually spicy all rolled into one.
" Mayer's social life these days consists of swiping right more than going out and partying, though; he's traded alcohol for pot, or, as he so poetically phrases it, "I'm actually very thoughtfully entering cannabis life.
She doesn't narrate so much as poetically distill, into chapters seldom more than a page and a half long, the beauty, violence, poverty, humiliation and resilience that have marked Lakota existence for several hundred years.
In one article, Justice Scalia waxed almost poetically about the game of stickball in Queens, which was different from the game of stickball in Brooklyn, although both relied on the pink rubber balls known as spaldeens.
Nicholas Butkovich from Pennsylvania wrote poetically about "'Like Going Back in Time': Puerto Ricans Put Survival Skills to Use": When life goes down the wrong path and everything seems to be against you, where do you turn?
But they came to the attention of the Pritzker jury because their works, if modest, "admirably and poetically fulfill the traditional requirements of architecture for physical and spatial beauty along with function and craftsmanship," the citation said.
Some artists here have responded poetically, including Peter Friedl, who films a stage adaptation of Kafka's "Report to an Academy" in which the ape narrator is played by actors and nonactors of various races, languages and ages.
It was there that he began making his name as a stage actor and a writer of plays that were edgy, surrealistic and poetically allusive in the manner of the progressive rock-and-roll music of that era.
Where she once wrote beautifully and poetically about her own life and loves, this time she swivels the lens outwards, elevating her contemplation of the human condition to the warfare and trauma we endure on a wider scale.
Strindberg regularly took early morning walks and poetically detailed one such route in the essay "Stockholm klockan 7 pa morgonen" ("Stockholm 7 O'Clock in the Morning"), published in 1905 in Dagens Nyheter (today the city's newspaper of record).
The lyrics long for death (as one might expect) but are written so poetically that the edge is blunted, and the overall effect is far less mopey than you may expect from a band named after ceremonial suicide.
Even the Alessandro Trincone outfit — a skirt covered with scores of poetically drifting scraps of fabric — that opens the exhibition challenges viewers to piece together its lineage both as an article of clothing and a gesture of provocation.
The show ends poetically on the recreation of a teahouse she designed in 1993, at 90, getting every detail right for a floating pavilion enclosed by stands of bamboo under a parachute of translucent fabric inspired by sailboats.
"I wanted to write a song about this principle: the lower down you go to gain your momentum from, the higher up it will propel ya, but I couldn't think of a way to say that poetically," she explained.
It is from this hole that the diabolical Richard first scrambles into view, eyes gleaming and smile atilt, to carry out his duties as Death's dispatcher in chief in this poetically exact interpretation of "Richard III" by Garry Hynes.
No. I think it has more to do with... most of my time writing is spent trying to articulate some of the big and small questions we've been talking about in the most poetically concise ways that I can.
"Elsa quite poetically describes it as 'nailing down the now' — I've never heard a better way of describing a photograph," Morris tells Vox critic at large Todd VanDerWerff on the latest episode of his podcast, I Think You're Interesting.
Writing from inside Yank's deepest desires, dreams, and innocence, O'Neill created one of his more densely and poetically conceived scripts, about a world where language and the body confuse one another, and end up cancelling each other out. ♦
To write critically or poetically about a mesmerizingly disgusting internet trend seems absurd, but maybe Puppies Puppies appears to have made this piece specifically for this reason: to make art criticism and art history look just a little contrived.
So it seems poetically fitting that on Tuesday, just as a judge in Delaware was approving the sale of the bankrupt Weinstein Co. to a Texas-based private equity firm, the 71st edition of Cannes Film Festival was getting underway.
We got the St. Louis rapper leaving Bootsy Bellows Saturday night -- who shares the same hometown as Chuck -- and he eulogized the rock 'n' roll legend pretty poetically ... until our camera guy asks him to name his favorite Chuck Berry song.
More poetically, a recent editorial in the state-run Global Times talked of China being willing to take "resolute actions" against "an arrogant foreign leader who prattles like a monk about honesty while hiding a stolen goose in his sleeve".
Under Ford, the label's runways may have been poetically smothered with rose petals or goatskin rugs (the latter a trip hazard when combined with spindly stilettos in the label's Fall 2002 show), but that was the extent of the amateur dramatics.
In the 22014s, Mr. Hernandez switched to color, experimentally in a series focused on the luxe life represented by high-end shopping strip, Rodeo Drive, and poetically in a second great body of work called "Landscapes for the Homeless" (22014-91).
We started with the salty and rich crab causa, poetically named "more crab than causa," which arrived as a Pop Art provocation of golden mashed potato layers overflowing with a crab and egg salad, drenched in a Pepto-Bismol-pink sauce.
My Vox colleague Aaron Rupar tweeted about a commercial that occupies the realm between C-level SNL parody and homemade iMovie for an object called "Trumpy Bear," a teddy bear that rather poetically has an American flag stuffed up its backside.
Mr. Cogley's description of Salinas evoked how Steinbeck immortalized his hometown in his work, most notably in his 290 novel "East of Eden," in which he writes poetically about the tawny hills, the lupine and poppy flowers and lettuce fields.
His drawing style is at once poetically attuned to details of neighborhoods and interiors (the lit canopy of a gas station at night, the banquette at an antiseptic diner) and deceptively plain when it comes to the people who inhabit them.
Her clothed counterpart sits on a cushion to her right, puts on a pair of latex gloves, applies lube to a finger, and, after asking for permission to touch her and "poetically" describing her vulva, proceeds to stroke her clitoris.
Challenging the selection protocols of the art system behind these emporia is the satisfyingly lean, poetically charged, curatorially radical, and venerable (it was founded in 1955) 32nd Biennial of Graphic Arts: Birth as Criterion, in Ljubljana (pronounced: loo-be-yana) Slovenia.
Michael Lombardo, HBO's president of programming, said on Thursday at the Television Critics Association winter press tour that he had approved a movie follow-up to "Deadwood," David Milch's poetically grimy western that ran for three seasons before ending rather suddenly in 2006.
It's not how I envisioned my Inauguration Day going—I had visions of weeping over Bloody Marys in some overcrowded brewpub, publicists and journalists hugging and consoling one another in the middle of Main Street as the snow fell poetically around us.
" One person rather poetically noted, "Windsor smells like desperate American youth mixed in with dirty Canadian hosers," while a University of Windsor student said, "The city may smell... and the university may be shitty... but who gives a fuck once your [sic] drunk.
His unabashedly liberal campaign—which centered on income inequality, or what de Blasio poetically termed a "tale of two cities"—prefigured the unrest that would shake the party, culminating in Bernie Sanders's unlikely challenge to Hillary Clinton in the 2016 presidential primary.
For Impossible, this may be out of necessity, as they voluntarily tested one of their ingredients (poetically, the one that gives the burgers their "bleeding" appearance) on some 188 rats who were fed the ingredient before being killed and cut open for study.
He reuses the same shots — poetically waving slow-motion flags, erratic whip pans, low-angle circular pans, subjects that make the world seem to swirl epically around them — over and over again, making each film seem like a collage of his favorite personal quotes.
Yeah, it poetically recaps Henry David Thoreau's two years (and some change) in the woods of New England, just like you remember, but the later sections (the ones you maybe skimmed as a teenager) are a mishmash of ideas and styles both experimental and exploratory.
The "Eightfold Way," which Gell-Mann poetically named after the Buddhist eightfold path to enlightenment, has been likened to the Mendele'ev Periodic Table of Elements in chemistry because it classified subatomic particles, like protons, neutrons, mesons, and baryons, into groups with similar and related properties.
In the absence of Cold War technologies, since those spying days are over, le Carré has turned a single elderly man's memory into a machine so highly elaborated, so poetically structured, and so very sad that it seems to hold all the world inside it.
Tim Sutton, whose career began in 2012 with festival-favorite Pavilion, has a brand of filmmaking that's often been compared to the works of Gus Van Sant and Terence Malick—immaculately shot, poetically discursive adventures that find their beauty in existing from moment to moment.
Poetically, I've gotten a little caught up in an antiquated kind of language, especially over the last few years, and also we spend more and more time in rural areas, where things around us that we're describing are kind of timeless: animals and plants.
This concept runs like a clothesline throughout the artist's vision of stages of human behavior and movement and subtlety supports and hangs above each of the pieces in the poetically-titled IN A DREAM YOU SAW A WAY TO SURVIVE AND YOU WERE FULL OF JOY exhibit.
From the unapologetic Spanglish sprinkled throughout the dialogue without a single subtitle to the way the camera poetically captures the rich caramels and chocolate browns of the characters' skin tones, Starz is gearing up to air the most authentically Latinx show to ever hit premium cable television.
And the "Rosenkavalier" finale, one of Balanchine's most poetically psychological dramas, is a dream-ballroom fantasy, in which a woman, in a long dance soliloquy, is repeatedly partnered by a man who may be her fantasy or an increasingly real suitor in whom she can scarcely believe.
The work "has political and social undertones, and it also poetically and critically analyzes what's going on around the world and specifically in the region," said Yasmin Atassi, director of Green Art Gallery in Dubai, which represents Mr. Azmeh and showed his work at the fair.
I soon had a list of dozens of fascinating people, such as Ms. Larsen; Madhubala, a Bollywood actress whose poetically tragic life was cut short; and Margaret Abbott, a golfer who died without ever knowing that she was the first American woman to win an Olympic championship.
We're talking about the sort of heartland populated by average-looking people meant to be made poetically interesting by their exotic brides (from Australia!), dying words ("Oscar Wilde") and symbolically sadistic late-night film taste (one vindictive woman who isn't Mildred is glued to "Don't Look Now").
In a small group show, Historical Amnesia, mounted at BronxArtSpace, Minaya presents her piece "Containers" (2017) color photographs along with poetically descriptive texts, all of which are tacked to the wall with T-pins to form a largish documentary storyboard of a performance at Wave Hill cultural center.
But this is the real world we're living in, where the weather errs on the side of stifling and we're all seeking solace in the comfort of the AC, a safe distance away from the sun's harsh rays — thus dashing any hopes of them poetically "kissing" our hair.
As The Economist went to press Mr Johnson was preparing to demonstrate his loyalty to Mrs May by sitting in the front row for her speech, having proclaimed, poetically, that the cabinet was a "nest of singing birds", as if voters cannot discriminate between trilling nightingales and hissing vipers.
Their guidelines are both specific (no visible steel reinforcements; exposed wooden pillars must have a foundation stone); and poetically open to improvisation (the layout should "reflect harmony with the natural topography and historic resources" and the plan should account for "existing urban structures and resources worthy of preservation").
" They also poetically explain the physical reaction that occurs when a someone mentions a Who versus a Them: "The traditional A-list to D-list hierarchy no longer makes sense when people whose names you've never heard before are trending on a social networks with hundreds of millions of users.
Based on Rodin's belief that "the world will only be happy when all people have the souls of artists," Halprin goes on to prepare the dancers for the performance, using a selection of Rodin's sculptures as models to create a performance that is at once poetically cosmo-ecological and visually powerful.
With a rising crescendo of oil pipes pumping their poisonous content into the garden, Ahmadi poetically yet forcefully comments on the challenges of autocratic leadership and the impact of the oil economy on a country where public gardens and private courtyards are the sanctuary and spatial pulse of everyday life.
It is poetically fitting that the college whose basketball team became the first men's No. 27 seed to upset a No. 221 seed — as the U.M.B.C. Retrievers did on Friday night, defeating Virginia, 213-27 — is a place where such a historic achievement might be taken in stride, if not overlooked.
For these reasons, Allahyari cites projects such as "The Other Nefertiti" and Ryan Woodring's Decimate Mesh series that focus on more complex layers of historical reconstruction as the most insightful and meaningful to her as they move beyond a superficial architectural approach to critically, conceptually, and poetically explore the greater systems involved.
That kind of power carries through the entirety of Blue, a tapestry of evocative, poetically specific images, alternately rapped and crooned by a 21-year-old who has known too much pain (and, probably, too many cigarettes) than anyone his age should, with a voice and a gift for songwriting that show it.
This time he collaborated with Daniel MacIvor, an award-winning Canadian playwright, who wrote a libretto that, if a little poetically stiff ("This night with you from here unspools forever"), boldly blends Hadrian's history, as we know it, with dramatic fabrication to create a gay love story that speaks to our time.
Divines holds up next to any white male auteur's coming-of-age narrative in the French canon, be it The 400 Blows or The Life Before Us. It offers, to beautiful effect, the customary ingredients of these movies: It's by turns deadpan, crude, funny, and devastatingly sad; poetically stylized passages alternate with harsh realism.
And so, both men admit, it feels poetically appropriate that, as surfing prepares for its Olympic debut in Tokyo next summer, Florence and Slater will vie for the one remaining spot on the American team — a spot to be decided this month at the Pipe Masters, at Banzai Pipeline, on waves barreling toward their houses.
Celebrity breakups can often get messy, but that isn't the case for recent exes Orlando Bloom and Katy Perry, according to comments the British actor made in the May issue of Elle U.K. The couple released a statement confirming their split — or, rather, "taking respectful, loving space," as they so poetically put it — in late February.
Or, put more poetically... Zane of NY ... and the sun ceased to shine; and the streets and alleys were cold; and no one could see beyond the next building; and the flora and fauna requiring full or partial sun began to die and all was replaced by shade plants that took a lifetime to take hold.
A spectacular example of such a conflicted creative sensibility is "Kai Althoff: and then leave me to the common swifts (und dann überlasst mich den Mauerseglern)" at the Museum of Modern Art, which has more than 200 of Mr. Althoff's poetically allusive, delicately made paintings, drawings and sculptures folded into an unfortunately messy and confusing installation of found materials.
But the way they saw it, "Africa" was an antidote to the fundamentally asinine judiciousness of European culture, already apparent in the machinations of the privileged dandy Roussel, who used the fanciful idea of Africa both in Impressions d'Afrique and in the poetically convulsive Nouvelle Impressions d'Afrique (New Impressions of Africa) (1932) as a setting for his fantastical tales.
In recognition of their geography, the Modernist buildings here tend to be earthbound (and, unlike many celebrated works of contemporary architecture, made with relatively little glass); more poetically, they also offer expansive, panoramic views wherever possible, so that their inhabitants are never able to forget their tenuous stake in the earth, the transience of their existence.
" One could draw a line from Taylor to DeCarava and straight back to the Harlem Renaissance, when artists of all disciplines were pushing to evoke the kind of punch-in-the-gut assessment that Hughes so poetically delivers in his 1926 poem "I, Too": "They'll see how beautiful I am / And be ashamed — / I, too, am America.
While the sun sets along the Brooklyn side of the East River, two men donning soiled white outfits throw heavy blocks of steel at one another, rhythmically roll around on the concrete, and, at times, poetically caress one another with the same steel chunks, to the hypnotic sound of their heavy breathing and the industrial clinks of the hurled metal.
Even before Monday's incidents, it was inevitable that the bridge collapse would reignite conversations about the city's infrastructure problem, which Atlanta magazine summarized presciently and poetically in a 2012 feature story: Like ghosts rising out of a Confederate cemetery, Atlanta's past lapses in judgment haunt the region today, leaving a smoky trail of suburban decay, declining home values, clogged highways, and a vastly diminished reputation.
There was also a lot of buzz about the so-called "Fuckbox" scene, in which Binoche's character apparently "straddles a giant dildo chair and violently masturbates in a scene that's endowed with the tortured energy of a Cirque du Soleil routine," as IndieWire's David Ehrlich so poetically described it—but sadly, the first trailer devotes most of its runtime to Pattinson, not the Fuckbox.
On Thursday, McDonald's announced that it will be bringing touchscreen ordering and table service to all 14,000 of its restaurants in the United States, starting with locations in Boston, Chicago, Seattle, San Francisco, and Washington, D.C. "Typically, the majority of our crew is behind the counter, and that counter literally has been a barrier between our crew and the customer," McDonald's chief executive Steve Easterbrook poetically explained.
Perhaps she liked the way the creamy powder felt as she applied it to the surface of her deepening wrinkles or the way the shape and size of its packaging fit so neatly in her purse; now seen here, presented by her son in a display case in the wake of her untimely death, the object becomes poetically infused with a meaning it never had to her.
However, there is at least one flawed notion at the root of Landlord Colors that I cannot ignore, because it is antithetical to the Detroit I know: "In the context of a place such as Detroit, an exemplar of the American Rust Belt, the term [landlord colors] poetically speaks to the overarching material conditions enveloping the city — a situation not of its own choosing," writes Mott on the introductory page of her catalogue essay.
In the post, the poetically named Fuckaduckfuckaduck writes: By way of supporting information he provides an extensive list of historical explosions, earthquakes, airplane crashes and scientific discoveries that also happened on April 26 (although the logic of why this would influence North Korean military planning is left to the reader to decide), washed down with a series of references to tinfoil favorite Operation Jade Helm, which Alex Jones "revealed" as President Obama's secret plan to impose martial law and steal all the guns in Texas.

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