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165 Sentences With "punctuates"

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

It is comic relief that punctuates an otherwise tense situation.
The email from your boss that punctuates all sentences — fine.
Conflict punctuates the record, as combatants fought over mining regions.
A rattle of Israeli gunfire in the distance punctuates his verses.
But sometimes humor reveals and punctuates what serious, stoic reflection can't.
Lanthimos punctuates this deft satire with a dash of the truly absurd.
He punctuates sentences with a smattering of superlatives and decisive adjectives -- Great!
Bebianno's departure punctuates Bolsonaro's first cabinet crisis since he took office on Jan.
Static randomly glitches through video footage, and disturbing sound design punctuates every scene.
Zora gives Franklin a hard time about how often "like" punctuates his speech.
" He gave the abrupt, infectiously guffawing laugh that frequently punctuates his conversation. "Sorry!
Humor punctuates disagreements, and attendees pass chocolate around the table as they work.
The smell of bread, cake, or cookies baking often punctuates our fondest childhood memories.
Once instituted, Prohibition augmented American culture, the legacy of which punctuates the online exhibition.
Our Style reporter looked at how the film's Afrocentric hair punctuates character and plot.
Mattis's exit punctuates a particularly strained week in foreign policy for the White House.
It punctuates prayers about the divine as the source and underlying rightful possessor of power.
From explosive bursts to muffled snorts, some form of laughter punctuates almost all verbal communication.
A black basalt stone fireplace punctuates a wall of windows in the formal dining room.
Then he returns to his study and punctuates the chaos with a big sung note.
Meticulous hand stitching, perfectly color-matched to the exterior red punctuates a dark, thick leather interior.
She was disarmingly warm with a boisterous laugh — the same one that punctuates her campaign speeches.
In Mexico, the architecture of Félix Candela punctuates landscapes like giant flowers, folded umbrellas, and cresting waves.
With Stauskas on his heels, Powell bounds up court and punctuates the win with a windmill dunk.
Beyoncé closes out with "Grown Woman," a song that punctuates the most consistent message of her career.
The land punctuates this great expanse of sea, constituting a mere 0.035 percent of our sovereign area.
Desperation punctuates life for the 393,000 civilians who remain in eastern Ghouta, according to United Nations estimates.
Across the River Thames, a 265-story glass-fronted pyramid known as the Shard punctuates the view.
Collins Island, a smudge of land with eight homes just off Balboa Island's western tip, punctuates the trio.
Maybe a single leaf of limp iceberg lettuce punctuates the whole thing, and a smear of lukewarm mayo.
She punctuates otherwise unremarkable exchanges with a Fran Drescher-style "thanks," more times than you can possibly count.
Mr Travolta's bullish Shapiro punctuates the drama with humour, and throws Mr Schwimmer's perennially-forlorn Kardashian into relief.
The third punctuates its verses with a stunning sample from Hans Zimmer's score for The Thin Red Line.
He punctuates the words by delivering everything in a laconic drawl, giving it a casual shit-talking effect.
Rather than letting life slide by in an undefined haze, prayer punctuates our hours, our days, and our weeks.
The Ringed City punctuates this intro with a two-on-one boss fight, complete with a last-minute transformation.
"Landscape of Darkness" punctuates that unknown as it portrays light cast over Israeli settlements, but not adjacent Palestinian villages.
Ever the seasoned communications professional, she punctuates her sentences with a peppy "right?" to make sure you're following along.
Her delivery and timbre punctuates the nature of her lyrics: wounded, searching, trying to make sense of it all.
The Ringed City punctuates this intro with a two-on-one boss fight, complete with a last-minute transformation.
Mr. Lee punctuates scenes with album covers of his soundtrack choices, like a vinyl enthusiast showing off his collection.
"Everything I am saying will be done" is how he punctuates his pledge to make government fair and honest.
One of the final displays, a digitised version of Don Celender's 1982 "Reincarnation Study", punctuates a gloomy subject with humour.
The 2,600 shooting clubs in Switzerland mean the sound of gunfire from ranges in nearly every village punctuates many weekends.
The seizing of Deir al-Zour punctuates the turnaround Mr. Assad has managed in more than six years of war.
A random arrangement of tubular Apparatus light fixtures in various metal finishes and sizes punctuates a long hallway like stalagmites.
Additionally, Seborovski punctuates the surface of the pieces mounted on the wall with nodules and string, inviting the viewer's caress.
He talks fast and frenetically about this stuff, and punctuates his sentences by reaching across the table and touching my forearm.
" Sample lyrics, sung by Mr. Gillooly: "Skating's all about the dress, dress, dress/And how it punctuates your chest, chest, chest.
The old Oliver smokestack, from the Oliver Chilled Plow Works that once supplied plows to the world, still punctuates the horizon.
It stands alone as a stud earring, and the diamond shape also punctuates chokers and bracelets and dangles from more delicate necklaces.
"Saint" punctuates minimal downtempo jamming with short bursts of rockin' guitar licks in a style that would make Built to Spill proud.
Kris, apparently Mom to everyone, reassures Rousteing that the show is going to be fabulous and punctuates that with a big hug.
The resignation of Boris Johnson, Britain's foreign minister, punctuates a remarkably chaotic 24 hours in which three ministers left the May government.
" The line "because of that" pulls an abrupt stop into the line that punctuates the idea of "shoot him in his head.
Ms. Dormer, who narrates flashbacks to her unsavory past, occasionally punctuates a scene by turning her feline gaze straight into the camera.
Proceeding nonchronologically — the fling has apparently ended with a corpse — the film punctuates its narrative with documentary-like commentary from forensics experts.
His commentary punctuates the characters' journeys through the sixth dimension, forever insinuating their flaws — but leaving the ultimate judgments up to the audience.
The decision punctuates months of criticism by President Trump of his top law enforcement officer over his recusal from the ongoing Russia investigation.
Now, she regularly brings the heat to the network's political coverage, which she passionately punctuates with both hard-to-argue statistics and Beyoncé references.
Moon is a personable man who punctuates such thoughts with a soft chuckle, where I, a white guy, might be more inclined to curse.
That's because Gfrörer punctuates her gothic mumblecore with moments of intense intimacy, and she treats both sex and death with explicit matter-of-factness.
To make a poignant film even more poignant, Sungwoong punctuates the film with shots of letters Hakamada wrote to Hideko before he became ill.
As with the Rubens painting of Saturn devouring one of his sons that punctuates certain scenes, you kind of can't stop looking at it.
One German waitress, describing her favorite dishes, punctuates each recommendation with a loud "muah" gesture, her fingers pulled in a flourish from her lips.
"For the Damaged Coda" punctuates scenes in which Evil Morty, the only true challenge to Rick's absurd intelligence, reveals small pieces of his master plan.
The building sits beneath the stunning, 800-year-old church Oude Kerk, and the sound of its bells punctuates my meeting with Hella and Yvette.
But the film punctuates those brutal scenes with gorgeous, sweeping shots of the Scottish landscape our band of outlaws are fighting to hold on to.
Kendrick punctuates Cozz's rhythmic flow with a layered, harmonised hook that has the aural quality of floating and literally elevates the sound of the track.
And since nothing kills the domestic vibe like a wait at the checkout line, the final transaction that punctuates a purchase is currently being remodeled.
Pico punctuates "Feed" with songs, labelled Tracks 1 through 19 (from Beyoncé's "XO" to "Up the Ladder to the Roof," by the Supremes), personally annotated.
We then jump to his college days, during which he dwells in an attic apartment and, as expected, punctuates his bookishness with love and sex.
The move punctuates an increasingly nasty legal battle between Uber and Waymo, the self-driving-vehicle company that was spun off from Google's parent company.
But that punctuates the point: Wherever we are today is not necessarily an accurate predictor — or even close to it — of where we'll end up.
The central timber lattice echoes the Gothic vaulting at nearby King's College Chapel, she said, while the golden dome punctuates the skyline of lean university spires.
The animals were "a supermarket and hardware store," according to Blankenship, who punctuates his pronouncements with shakes of a ceremonial rattle made from dried buffalo scrotum.
Angie Tennant has little to do as Ashley, but Daniela Mastropietro punctuates Lucia's speeches with sharp intakes and explosions of breath that indicate her fiery temperament.
It doesn't matter when the ominous rumble of traffic or inevitable siren punctuates the performance; in Shakespeare's tragedy, the intrusion always seems intentional and perfectly timed.
Lewis's address, so often eclipsed by King's, punctuates the second volume, recasting this capstone event for a generation less certain of the endurance of its message.
This steeping, or maceration, tames the shallot's raw allium fire and turns each bit into a little, savory acid bomb that punctuates each bite of salad.
"Music became the motivating factor in my life, and still is," said Mr. Simons, who laughs easily and punctuates his pithy comments with his bushy eyebrows.
Cheryl Lynn's late 43s classic, "Got To Be Real," punctuates the film on more than one occasion, and has become imbued with new meaning because of it.
The lingering pauses with which Ms. Barabas punctuates the tersely written dialogue lend an extra soupçon of suspense and even some unspoken sexual tension to the story.
She's shed the brattiness that used to trademark her work, and instead embraces sincerity; her voice punctuates tinkling synths, and the whole thing has a sparkling quality.
He punctuates the clip with periodic shouts of "Come on, Jon!" and "Ar-yyy-a!" and even a "Kiss!" when Grey Worm and Missandei share a smooch.
But it is in Mexico where his legacy as an experimental architect is truly seen, where concrete poetry punctuates landscapes like giant flowers, folded umbrellas, and cresting waves.
The assaults and killings are depicted in bloody detail, but we're still supposed to laugh when Mr. McBride's character punctuates his depredations with often profanity-laden one-liners.
At 39, Nawaz is handsome and vaguely famous looking in person, prematurely silver-haired, with a widow's peak and Mephistophelean soul patch that punctuates a politician's easy smile.
Her French is improving but not fluent, and she punctuates her affections with "bellissima," rims her eyes in thick black liner and speaks in a heavy Italian accent.
Zink, in St. Louis, said their event will focus not just on school shootings, but the violence that punctuates life for some teenagers in places like east St. Louis.
"I alway gotta switch it up—I been switching it up in here," he says, pausing to rap a few bars, which he punctuates with a self-satisfied giggle.
He punctuates the action—and helps it along via exposition—by stepping to the lip of the stage and describing the months of dissolution as stoically as he can.
Villeneuve takes his time with this fight — between K and his fellow replicant Luv (Sylvia Hoeks) — showing each and every moment of horror and violence that punctuates the battle.
Dr. Wood notes first that the ACLU doesn't reveal its methodology or dataset in the report, then punctuates Amazon's original response—that it encourages higher confidence thresholds for law enforcement.
From the opening story of this collection until the end, Svoboda punctuates her prose with the lyrical style that she's always been known for, but each sentence still feels fresh.
It's a highly specific choice, much like the way Jane occasionally punctuates his words with derisive spitting, or the lizardy, narrow-eyed way he watches and judges the world around him.
A light piano-based soundtrack by Oscar Araujo punctuates bright chromatic splashes that illustrate how hope can live on in this nightmarish—and all too real—reflection of modern work culture.
Given that the index has soared 50 percent in just the past 12 months, the recent decline could just be the sort of sell-off that punctuates any long-term rally.
" His version of "Ol' Man River" punctuates a homage to Paul Robeson with anarchic howls; he tears into Clarence Carter's hit "Strokin'" and struts through Tom Waits's "Whistling Past the Graveyard.
Kerstin Brätsch's "Fossil Psychics for Christa" punctuates the walls of the new sixth-floor Terrace Café with shiny bright glass-like pieces that resemble big brush strokes, masks and crazed intarsia.
That scene is upsetting enough — as his parents argue, the boy's face looks eerily possessed — but director David Lynch punctuates it with the incessant horn blast of the car behind them.
In it, an atypically sober Gambino starts out performing his normal, carefree persona — but punctuates the show by intermittently taking out guns and mowing down the other carefree artists around him.
The drone punctuates its airborne tour with lightning-fast whip pans timed to the soundtrack of "Chronicles Of A Fallen" by The Bloody Beetroots, amping up the speed of the short film.
He punctuates even the most depressing moments with a nebula bright synthesizer arpeggio, or one of his virtuosic bass leads, which still hit with the concussive force of a t-shirt cannon.
Nelson's arresting and gravely evocative art punctuates the short chapters — told in the compelling voice of a fictional black woman — which stretch from the Revolutionary War to the election of Barack Obama.
Brotton punctuates his narrative with ruminations on the Moors and Turks on the English stage, which varied from caricature to Othello; yet the real life encounters could be more complex and surprising.
In An Opening, Rasheed creates an immersive aural environment of sound from these multiple storylines, then punctuates the narratives with visual works that pair poetic sentence fragments with cut-outs or collages.
In another scene, Cuarón punctuates a shot of the parents and children watching TV with one of Cleo seated next to them on the floor, a child's arm draped on her body.
The sentencing of a former police officer in Minneapolis punctuates a case whose ripple effects raised profoundly uncomfortable -- and unanswered -- questions about race, policing and the use of force in the United States.
Noé punctuates the action with vibrant, flashy title cards with names like "Existence Is A Fleeting Illusion," and "Birth Is A Unique Opportunity," which only add to the overall sensation of bad trip.
If, like many of his compatriots, Lanchester punctuates his day with BBC news bulletins then it's likely that his dreams have been colonized by Britain's long and painful exit from the European Union.
Passing 410 ppm "is important because it punctuates another milestone in the upwards march of CO2," according to Ralph Keeling, head of the Scripps CO2 program at Scripps Institution of Oceanography in California.
And even though he is in recovery now — a series of "sharing" monologues frames and punctuates the play — his daughters have trouble forgiving him, if not for their sake then for their mother's.
Dessert at EsterEv, one of the most finessed in Milwaukee, punctuates the meal: roasted pear with honey and vanilla that has the texture of silk and a flavor like the first day of fall.
His contributions are everywhere: in feats of engineering like a tall silver tower whose top, sawed almost off, hangs perilously over the treetops; in the creaking, kinetic metalwork that punctuates Saint Phalle's hallucinatory landscape.
The visual stylings of Toronto's Hard to Kill are often intentionally distorted to match their equally gravelly music, and the final installment of their accompanying videos for this year's self-titled debut punctuates that approach.
"Oh Baby,", a felt romantic lament that sounds simultaneously epic and small, sways woozily as the band constructs a net of synthesizer hooks, including one particularly playful glassy lick that punctuates certain lines for emphasis.
If one of the only virtues of putting up with winter as the long season is watching it melt into spring, then the summer festival becomes the exclamation mark that punctuates the end of that wait.
"The fact that the M.T.A. is using Tide to clean the subways punctuates the point that a fundamental overhaul in approach and management is needed," Patrick Muncie, a spokesman for Mr. Cuomo, said in a statement.
The lack of filter is essentially part of the point—and there is lots of fun to be had (and Bierdz lets it all hang out quite literally, as he punctuates the book with several nude photos).
In addition, Podhoretz wisely punctuates the action with calls from Lakers and Celtics play-by-play announcers Chick Hearn and Johnny Most, two wildly distinctive voices whose homer-ism practically defined the emotion that surrounded these contests.
RIZE, Turkey (Reuters) - On banners hung from mosques, cultural centres, construction sites and bridges, President Tayyip Erdogan's face punctuates the landscape along the highway to his ancestral home town of Rize on Turkey's northern Black Sea coast.
Comedienne Samantha Bee did say sorry -- but only after calling the President's daughter Ivanka a "feckless c***" -- in what was just the latest explosion of angry and divisive rhetoric that punctuates most days in the Trump era.
Bolton's Moscow trip, his second as national security adviser, also punctuates mounting intrigue surrounding the disappearance of Jamal Khashoggi, and is likely to be eclipsed by the ongoing fallout over the U.S.-based Saudi journalist's presumed killing.
Colorful drawings decorate the walls, yet a sense of deep darkness punctuates the air: These boys have been heavily traumatized by Yemen's ongoing civil war, and almost all of the students were forcibly recruited as child soldiers.
Now 80 and best known as the author of the 1980 play "Bent," Mr. Sherman punctuates the shifting affections with elaborate reminiscences from Beau that cast personal and political glances back at gay mores across the decades.
She fears that the job she has done for years and clearly loves will one day be automated away or shifted to packing trucks, where she can no longer appreciate the scenery that punctuates her long, idle drives.
The 2018 BMW X3's front wheels are pushed slightly further forward with a little more room between the front axle and dashboard, which visually punctuates the X3's rear-wheel-drive bias—a growing rarity among competitors.
That observation punctuates a finding that dozens of state and local governments have contracted with two companies that federal officials have flagged as security risks, specifically Lenovo, a cellphone and laptop maker, and Lexmark, a laser printer company.
Carter wrote a script for the bot, imitating Gallop's words (like how often the British mogul says "bloody" on Twitter) and paying close attention to punctuation ("There's nothing more human than the way in which someone punctuates," Carter said).
Lennard, who punctuates about every fifth sentence with "boom," told me that he had done three tours in Vietnam, and had lived in the neighborhood for 20 years before moving to Glendale, still in Queens but not exactly close.
While Ms. See punctuates the novel with evocative references to customs and rituals ("The Expel Birds Festival," the "Day of Sorrow and Worry" preceding a wedding), she also illustrates how Lily's and Snow Flower's destinies take tragically different directions.
MIKE RABON St. Paul To the Editor: "For Gays Across America, a Massacre Punctuates Fitful Gains" (front page, June 13) reported that F.B.I. statistics show that 18.6 percent of the "single-bias hate crimes" committed in 2015 were against L.G.B.T. people.
That's no surprise: The announcement punctuates a process that has been a sham, falling far short of the benchmarks laid out by a bipartisan group of experts (including one of us, Ms. Schneider) last fall for effective, credible congressional investigations.
President Trump's campaign announced Wednesday that he had raised $26.3 million over 224 hours as he kicked off his re-election bid, an enormous haul that punctuates the financial advantage he is expected to enjoy over his Democratic challengers in 224.
Teddy's cry of "Ya-ha-hawww!" punctuates the prose of "The Perilous Adventures of the Cowboy King," exclamation being the default choice of voice for "Teedie," who narrates his life from his childhood in Manhattan until his elevation to the presidency.
On the roof, there's the open-air Rare Bird, with a long zinc bar, a couple of fireplaces and good views of what is locally known as the Batman building (it's actually the AT&T tower) that punctuates the Nashville skyline.
Joe Biden, who might not know the difference between a URL and a text message and who punctuates tweets like a grandpa, has very strong opinions on one of the most nuanced and controversial guiding principles of the internet: Section 230.
But this is as much the god's story as it is Eolo's: The god (embodied in a stone and referred to as the Hill) punctuates its narration of Eolo's experiences with its own memories, recalling its prehistoric origins and Neolithic experiences.
When he accompanies her to an offsite visit, he's horrified to discover that one comical exchange he has with a employee gets the employee immediately fired — an event that Ines punctuates by bluntly revealing that the employee would have been laid off anyway.
" Ballad "How to Feel" punctuates the sparse production with the occasional not-quite-cracked vocal or breathy gasp, moments of vulnerability that make way for belted lines like, "I've set everything you said in stone / And that's why everything I know is lost.
While there are only so many ways to shoot a car chase, Wright ("Shaun of the Dead") has somehow managed to breathe new life into it through the combination of sight and sound, as the music perfectly punctuates every lightning-fast edit.
He blesses himself, punctuates victories with backflips, and in his last fight—against a highly-rated Nicholas Walters—Lomachenko quietly taunted the previously undefeated Jamaican by standing flat footed at the center of the ring with his hands dropped to his sides.
The van punctuates their stilted small talk with automatic ding ding dings — Alex is craving Chick-fil-A, and Daniel needs to over-explain his made-up excuse for why he's filming their ride, something about a drunken driving P.S.A. for school.
To me, the energy of this era brilliantly climaxes with "I'm Not Perfect (But I'm Perfect For You"), a pumping pop track in which she punctuates each chorus with ferocious chants, once again taking pop sounds and pushing them into freaky, leftfield corners.
"The chief justice's comment punctuates the fact that the administration is doing very poorly before judges appointed by Republicans and Democrats," Mr. Gerson said, "most of whom are acting, not as politicians in robes, but as independent agents of the rule of law."
In a film where Pink rides a unicorn and Justin Timberlake cuts carrots, the most riotous guest scenes belong to the coterie of Will Arnett, Chelsea Peretti, Eric Andre and Mike Birbiglia, whose running media commentary inflates and punctuates the film at perfect intervals.
He has a dry wit but seems not entirely sure when jokes have been received as such, and so, as if someone once told him that he should soften his fearsome intellect by smiling more, he punctuates his speech with a randomized distribution of grins.
By the time Sanders punctuates the entire thing with a half-hearted "yay," the Easter story has been turned into something that's not even recognizable from its original form — just like all of the other norms the Trump administration has shattered into a million pieces.
The 23-year-old, who grew up in Cameroon, has become synonymous with the concept of "The Process," a strategy for long-term talent building that originated with the former 76ers general manager Sam Hinkie — Mr. Embiid famously punctuates his feisty tweets with the phrase.
Ms. Bell edits the pages to stress the undisguised hostility of the press to the defendants, and she punctuates the series with a full-page advertisement taken out in The New York Times, The New York Post, The Daily News and New York Newsday.
The period at the end of a text from a friend who never uses periods in their messages is a highly distressing one; the one at the end of a text from the friend who always properly punctuates and capitalizes their messages is no cause for alarm.
Aside from the heart-stopping PU3IT that punctuates Golden State's unstoppable open-floor offense and the sudden treys that pick-and-roll defensive schemes are not advanced enough to slow down, nothing is scarier than Durant simply deciding to give his team three points after a possession breaks down.
Told partly in color and partly in black and white, the film contains long stretches that are virtually silent, with musical accompaniment (composed by Carter Burwell) that sometimes adds atmosphere, and sometimes punctuates what's happening on screen, similar to how musical accompaniment worked during the silent-movie era.
Indeed, if the 47-year-old decorator has a single governing aesthetic, it's exuberance: Consider his downtown New York City townhouse, where a red velvet banquette punctuates the Schiaparelli-pink living room, and a set of double doors are covered in zebra hide and detailed with rock crystal handles.
The two-day Democratic convention, which concluded on Thursday with Mr. Cuomo's formal acceptance of his party's backing, punctuates the challenge facing Ms. Nixon's insurgent candidacy; to win, she must expand her appeal beyond the faction of die-hard activists who despise Mr. Cuomo, to the broader Democratic electorate.
In "Deep South, Untitled (Bridge on Tallehatchie)," a chemical streak punctuates the foreground, a spectral teardrop signaling that there is something more to grapple with than the placid, almost Pictorialist tableau that leads the eye to the bridge in the background, from which some say Till was hurled to his death.
A narrator, whose voice punctuates the film with brief exposition, explains that Rick and Cliff have spent the last six months in Italy, where Rick was cast as a lead in a series of Spaghetti Westerns — a genre that Tarantino admires and has used as inspiration in many of his own films.
Both split the difference between unhinged verbal invention and nondescript corporate product, depending on the degree of wit they bring to the studio on any given day; with Wayne especially the excitement lies in his puns, his double entendres, his tongue-twisters, the way he punctuates his lines with chuckles and comments on his own performance.
The magnitude-7.1 quake turned dozens of buildings in central Mexico into dust and debris, killing at least 250 people, Mexico City Mayor Miguel Angel Mancera told Foro TV. The crowds are staying quiet to allow rescuers to hear any voices coming from under the debris, but the sound of metal and concrete cracking punctuates the near silence.
" He punctuates his discussions with sweeping summaries like this one, in reference to social media: "The art of persuasion, once the grandest of the humanities and accessible at its highest level only to those of genius — a Demosthenes or a Cicero, a Lincoln or a Churchill — is acquiring many of the attributes of a computational science.
What makes Twin Peaks so magnetic is the way it proceeds like a fairly normal small-town drama for much of its running time, but punctuates otherwise typical arcs with flashes of something else entirely — like a story about a love triangle being interrupted by a sudden, shocking vision of a dark horror from beyond time.
Charlie Says, on the other hand, punctuates its narrative with constant reminders of what Manson, and the women who followed him, are best remembered for: The murder of Gary Hinman on July 27, 169, followed by the brutal slaying of actress Sharon Tate and her four friends on August 9, 1969, and of Leno and Rosemary LaBianca just one night later.
The self-serious tone of a For Love Of The Game is not present, and in its place is a bunch of shit that is really weird when taken out of context, like when Langella punctuates his message of "making a splash" by literally talking in front of a water slide, or Costner recalling the "back and to the left" scene from JFK while analyzing game film, or the funeral in the middle of the practice field on the front office's busiest day of the year, because when and where else would you hold one?
Since her recent solo exhibitions in 2013 and 2014, which concentrated on personal narratives built around a collection of found objects, the artist has begun to move in the direction of much larger questions, without giving up on the open-endedness of an aesthetic process: looking from a window into another window, or gazing into a fragment of a window that once belonged to the artist's grandmother's house in İzmir — perhaps a reference to İhsan Naif and the theme of flight and liberation that punctuates the new work.

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