Answer:
How were women affected by the Arts and Craft movement? During the Arts and Crafts movement, women had opportunities they would not be given anywhere else. They were encouraged to participate in the movement, but they were hardly recognized for their work. Women were both makers and consumers of arts and crafts.
Explanation:
Manga Ormolu enters the dialogue on contemporary culture, technology, and globalization through a fabricated relationship between ceramic tradition (using the form of Chinese Ming dynasty vessels) and techno-Pop Art. The futuristic update of the Ming vessels in this series recalls 18th century French gilded ormolu, where historic Chinese vessels were transformed into curiosity pieces for aristocrats. But here, robotic prosthetics inspired by anime (Japanese animation) and manga (the beloved comics and picture novels of Japan) subvert elitism with the accessibility of popular culture.
Working with Asian cultural elements highlights the evolving Western experience of the “Orient.” This narrative is personal: the hybridization of cultures mirrors my identity as an ethnically-mixed Asian Canadian. My family history is one of successive generations shedding the markers of ethnic identity in order to succeed in an adopted country – within a few generations this cultural filtration has spanned China, India, Trinidad, Ireland and Canada.
While Manga Ormolu offers multiple points of entry into sociocultural dialogue, manga, by nature, doesn’t take itself too seriously. The futuristic ornamentation can be excessive, self-aggrandizing, even ridiculous. This is a fitting reflection of our human need to envision and translate fantastic ideas into reality; in fact, striving for transcendence is a unifying feature of human cultural history. This characteristic is reflected in the unassuming, yet utterly transformable material of clay. Manga Ormolu, through content, form and material, vividly demonstrates the conflicting and complementary forces that shape our perceptions of Ourselves and the Other.
Answer:
My favorite outfit is one with some black khakis, a blazer, a white shirt and a belt. The Designer made my pants not tight to my skin but kinda loose, he also made my belt a perfect fit around my waist, another thing is the shirt is easy to slip in and out, and finally my balizer is not tight and it has a little pocket for a kerchief. Thank you for your time.
Explanation:
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Edward Weston used the balance in <em>difference in value</em> to create contrast in the photograph 'shell', taken in 1927. The shell was a medium sized black and white photograph image that featured a nautilus shell balanced within an abalone shell that rested on a semi-reflective surface. The shells are set against a plain, dark background with pale tones that shine against it thus showing the difference in value to create contrast.