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31 Sentences With "portraitures"

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

I use my Wacom tablet whenever I need to create colorful portraitures of C.E.O.s.
Painting from photographs, he made some great group portraitures too, such as "Homage to Delacroix" (1864).
She's used her talents to create portraitures of pop culture figures, from the heroines of Stranger Things to Frida Kahlo, and even a little puppet version of herself.
In his 15 previous novels he has shown a deep and abiding interest in messy utopias ("Drop City"); ecological fervor ("When the Killing's Done"); grandiose guru figures (his fictional portraitures of John Harvey Kellogg, Alfred Kinsey and Frank Lloyd Wright); isolated, stranded lives ("San Miguel"); and, more generally, in ideas so overinflated that their only fate is to pop.
His commissioned portraitures include Queen Elizabeth (1999), Aung San Suu Kyi (1997) and Richard Branson.
Genthe owned a cat called Buzzer. Buzzer often appeared in portraitures with Genthe's subjects, most notably Broadway actresses to whom the cat warmed. One such sitting in autochrome was with actress Ann Murdock.
Echaroux is a portrait photographer. He holds a diploma as a specialist educator. He is known for his less than one minute celebrity portraitures. He has photographed celebrities Zinedine Zidane, Jonny Wilkinson, Gary Dourdan, and Fatboy Slim.
Pep Williams is a self-taught African-American fine art and street photographer, director, entrepreneur, philanthropist and former professional skateboarder who grew up in South Central Los Angeles, California. He has traveled globally creating material for his photographic exhibitions, which often feature real life portraitures of heavily tattooed individuals. He is one of the only photographers to have ever been granted access into the California State Prison System where he created a series of inmate portraitures entitled, Out Of Bounds. Williams has worked sporadically in the music industry, photographing artists such as; Chris Brown, Nick Cannon, Offset, and Suicidal Tendencies.
She has participated in panels, performances and discussions such as Cultured Magazine, "Late at Tate Britain", Creative Tech Week NYC, Afrotectopia at Google NYC, NYU, "Black Portraitures IV: The Color of Silence" at Harvard University and International Center for Photography.Their music is released through Never Normal Records.
The studio specialized in tintype portraitures in 1901. In 1903 the studio moved to Atlantic City and Jackson went with them. Jackson moved to New York City and worked for the American Press Association in the photo engraving department in 1912 where he also became a freelance news photographer.
Reeves graduated with a Fine Arts degree from Syracuse University. He served with the United States Navy during World War II after which he embarked on a career as a painter of horses. His big break came when Life magazine featured his painting of 1947 Horse of the Year, Armed. That publicity led to his being hired to do private portraitures for many American and European horse owners.
St. John the Baptist's Church in Madder-Market, Norwich Of the chapel of St. Mary, the south isle, in St. John the Baptist's Church in Madder-Market, Norwich, Frances Blomefield, Rector of Fersfield in Norfolk, writes: There is a stone in this isle, having the portraitures of a man and a woman; from his mouth, Pater de Celis deus miserere nobis. From her's, Fili Redemptor Mundi deus miserere nobis. At each corner a coat, viz.
The exhibition, according to the gallery's website, "hones in on her materially-driven examination of the situation of blackness in the United States." The show was critically praised by James Hannaham at 4Columns and selected by Kat Herriman as a Critic's Picks for Artforum. In 2018, Aria Dean was named one of Cultured Magazine's 30 artists under 35. In late 2017, Dean curated New Black Portraitures as part of Rhizome's Net Art Anthology.
Beck's first performing group was called The Moon Monsters, in which he played the tenor saxophone at age 15. He played in multiple rock groups leading up to Imagine Dragons, including the Cubes, the Franchise, Don Juan Triumphant, and other groups in the Utah music scene. Beck attended university in his home town of Provo.Digital Computer Arts Interview (2018-07-20). Andrew Colin Beck, his Illustrative Journey, and the Process Behind his Portraitures Retrieved 22 Oct 2019.
Artist Daniel Edwards was born in La Porte, Indiana in 1965. He is an alumnus and former professor of the Herron School of Art. His other works of art in Indianapolis include The Landmark for Peace Memorial and several bronze bust portraitures housed in the National Art Museum of Sport. His most well-known works are often considered controversial and address celebrity and popular culture, including Britney Spears, Oprah Winfrey, Fidel Castro and Paris Hilton as subjects.
She refers to her artworks as "figural works" in opposition to "portraitures", as the former term erases the particular identification of a protagonist, and underscores the universality and ambiguity of the subject. The gender of the figures she portrayed is often unknown. Her expressive and ambiguous figurative works perpetuate the duality of human experience as individual yet collective. While our personal emotions and thoughts are experienced internally, they can ultimately be shared and empathized among humans.
In 1977, Simon moved to New York City and began incorporating more poised portraitures into her portfolio. The same year, she shot Debbie Harry, the lead singer of Blondie, on the roof of a New York apartment. In 1978, Simon traveled with Queen as the group's tour photographer. She also began appearing on TV Party, a public access cable television show where she worked as the photographer and as one of Glenn O'Brien's featured co-hosts.
Chow has been commissioned to paint portraitures by Clint Eastwood, Sunny and Cher, and Princess Elizabeth of Yugoslavia. Corporate collectors include MacMillan Bloedel, Scott Paper, Price Waterhouse, and Ronald MacDonald House. His paintings are found in the personal collections of Samantha Eggar, Paul Anka, Gordon Lightfoot, Raymond Burr, and Roger Moore. Other collectors of Raymond Chow's paintings have included Prime Minister Indira Priyadarshini Gandhi, David Lam, Carole Taylor, Doreen Braveram, Fran Belzberg, Deputy Premier Grace McCarthy, Noel Harrison and Susan Matheson.
Many of the actual Mapplethorpe photographs displayed in the exhibit, including some of the more controversial ones, are seen in the film. A warning at its start advises viewers of the film's content and explains the necessity of displaying the images to allow both an understanding of the graphic nature of the handful of provocative pictures that prompted Barrie's arrest and an appreciation for the overall beauty of the photographer's portraitures and depictions of nature. The film was shot in Toronto, with Old City Hall used as the setting for the courtroom scenes.
Further periods of imprisonment followed in France, Holland, and Fleet debtors' prison. Johnstone managed to escape confinement on each occasion and the 1823 publication The Historical Gallery of Criminal Portraitures, Foreign and Domestic reported: "No prison has yet been found strong enough to hold him." In 1820, Johnstone was allegedly recruited by French agents to rescue Napoleon Bonaparte from St. Helena. The operation involved using a submarine to pick up Napoleon from near the shore and then transferring him to a waiting sail boat for onward transport to the United States.
Jones (1998), pp.151-152. Wilke referred to herself as a feminist artist from the beginning. The art critic Ann-Sargent Wooster said that Wilke's identification with the feminist movement was confusing because of her beauty — her self-portraitures looked more like a Playboy centerfold than the typical feminist nudes. According to Wooster, > The problem Wilke faced in being taken seriously is that she was > conventionally beautiful and her beauty and self-absorbed narcissism > distracted you from her reversal of the voyeurism inherent in women as sex > objects.
Portrait of Bogić Vučković, 1812 He studied at the Academy of Fine Arts Vienna from 1788 until 1796, and then lived in Timișoara and Novi Sad. He was engaged in portrait painting and painting icons for the sanctuary screens (iconostasis), and he also painted some historical compositions as well. Teodorović's portrait of Dositej Obradović is considered to be one of the first, modern Serbian civic portraitures. With this portrait, Teodorović placed himself in a Serbian Biedermeier school that include Pavel Đurković, Nikola Aleksić, Konstantin Danil, Jeftimije Popović (1791–1832) and others.
In the art of sculpture, he performed several realistic portraitures of famous historical figures, including poet Vojislav Ilić in 1903. Since he spent most of his life in semi- seclusion and without sufficient orders for sculpting work, he was forced to devote himself to draw caricatures, which he published in various newspapers and comic books. At one time he was employed as a draftsman at the Ministry of Construction. His interest in political and social problems was very skillfully transferred to the level of the brutish satire, he reacted against various social distortions, snobbery, and communion.
"The Revenge: A Tragedy by Edward Young. An illustrated review of this performance"The Theatre", Black Presence, The National Archives. at the Surrey Theatre shows Aldridge triumphing over Alonzo, dressed in flowing Moorish robes, which, according to the critic, "reminds one of the portraits of Abd-el Kader". The same reviewer praised Aldridge's comic talents in the contrasting role of Mungo (in the Bickerstaffe farce The Padlock), describing them as a refreshing corrective to current stereotypical "blackface" representation, "...differing entirely from the Ethiopian absurdities we have been taught to look upon as correct portraitures; his total abandon is very amusing.
Following that came Miss Melinda's Opportunity and Roger Berkley's Probation, two short novels, and, later, Anne Bradstreet and Her Time, a historical study of early colonial life, A Sylvan City, having already done the same thing for Philadelphia. A later published work of Campbell's, Darkness and Daylight in New York, was a series of graphic portraitures of the salient features of the city. In 1890, Campbell received a prize from the American Economic Association for a monograph upon "Women Wage-Earners." She was the author of a biography of 17th century colonial American poet, Anne Bradstreet.
He studied at Munich, from 1855 to 1859 was a member of the staff of the Allgemeine Zeitung of Augsburg, and from 1859 to 1864 editor of the liberal Isar-Zeitung. He published Jung-Friedel der Spielmann (Young Friedel, the Minstrel, 1854), a poem which established his reputation, and considerable fiction, including Des Rabbi Vermächtnis (The Rabbi's Bequest, 1866); Vervehmt (Proscribed, 1868), which was attacked for containing alleged portraitures of contemporaries of the Bavarian court; The Carbuncle (1870); My Sister (1876), descriptive of the doings of Lola Montez and the events of 1848 in Bavaria; Painter Fairbeard (1878); and Der Küster von Horst (The Sexton of Horst, 1889).
Technically brilliant and endlessly imaginative Milan Jovanović proved that portraitures and photographs that capture people and historical events could be as complicated and challenging as any other kind of art form. His camera work in the field, particularly during World War I, had captured his subjects in movement, like crossing a river at dusk, and in situations that mocked the artifice of studio poses. He is best remembered, however, for his portrait studies of: Ljubomir Nenadovic (1888); Milan Glisic (1888); Jovan Belimarkovic; Beta Vukanović (1896); Stojan Novaković (1898); Radoje Domanović (1900); Stevan Sremac (1901); Bora Stanković; Đorđe Krstić; Vladislav Petković Dis (1903); Branislav Nušić; Bogdan Popovic (1904); Cica Ilija Stanojevic (1908); and many other contemporaries of his generation.
38–40 Shakespeare's retrospective verdict, however, on the reign of Henry VI, given in the epilogue to Henry V, is politically neutral: "so many had the managing" of the state that "they lost France and made his England bleed".Henry V, epilogue, 5–14 In short, though Shakespeare "often accepts the moral portraitures of the chronicles which were originally produced by political bias, and has his characters commit or confess to crimes which their enemies falsely accused them of" (Richard III being perhaps a case in point),Kelly, 1970, p. 305 his distribution of the moral and spiritual judgements of the chronicles to various spokesmen creates, Kelly believes, a more impartial presentation of history.
Inspired by new environments on this trip, she decided to return to her father's home city of Saint-Louis in Senegal to start her own vision quest. Sought to challenge the norms of our society, Diallo immerses herself in the realm of anthropology, mythology, religion, science and martial arts to release her mind. Her work takes her to far remote areas, as she insists on spending intimate time with her subjects to better able represent their most innate energy “I treat my process as if it were an adventure liberating a new protagonist” — Diallo’s powerful portraitures unmask and stir an uninhibited insight that allows her audience to see beyond the facade. “We are in constant search for wonder and growth. I see art asa vessel to express consciousness and an access to diffuse wisdom, enlightenment, fear, beauty, ugliness, mystery, faith, strength, fearless, universal matter”.
Neade began experiments in James I's reign with a "warlike invention of the bow and the pike", an arrangement by which a bow could be attached to a movable pivot in the middle of the pike, thus making a combined weapon for offence or for close quarters. In 1624 he exhibited his invention before the King in St James's Park, and the Honourable Artillery Company soon afterwards made trial of it. A manuscript Neade had presented to the King was published in 1625, with six plates, as The double-armed man, by the new invention: briefly shewing some famous exploits atchieved by our Brittish bowmen, with severall portraitures proper for the pike and bow. In July 1633 he petitioned the council to approve "a direction for a commission to authorise the inventor to teach the service and for a proclamation to command the general exercise thereof".
Hilliard was appointed limner (miniaturist) and goldsmith to Elizabeth I at an unknown date; his first known miniature of the Queen is dated 1572, and already in 1573 he was granted the reversion of a lease by the Queen for his "good, true and loyal service."Strong (1975), p.4 In 1571 he had made "a booke of portraitures" for the Earl of Leicester, the Queen's favourite, which is likely to be how he became known to the Court; several of his children were named after Leicester and his circle.V&A; website, accessed 12 September 2007 Despite this patronage, in 1576 the recently married Hilliard left for France "with no other intent than to increase his knowledge by this voyage, and upon hope to get a piece of money of the lords and ladies here for his better maintenance in England at his return", carefully reported the English Ambassador in Paris, Sir Amyas Paulet, with whom Hilliard stayed for much of the time.

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