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RELIEF PRINTING 101 Maury 2017
RELIEF PRINTING 101 Maury 2017 Relief printing is one of the oldest (500 BC) and most direct of all the printmaking methods. Images can be simplistic and graphic, or intricate and detailed. It’s a subtractive process, meaning you cut away, or subtract, the areas you do not want to print. USING WOOD VS. LINEOLEUM? Wood and linoleum are the most common relief printing substrates. Other materials such as MDF, foam, cintra, and even dense cardboard have been used. Your choice of material will heavily dictate the kinds of marks and level of detail you are able to achieve. Wood Linoleum Grain of wood will print No grain, smooth surface Wood is denser, takes more effort to cut, Softer for cutting and easier for making curved offers a more angular mark. lines. More readily available and often cheaper Special order if no art store available, pricier Comes in very large sizes Many sizes available, including rolls PREPARING THE BLOCK LINOLEUM: No preparation of the surface of the block is required. But if you are printing multiple colors with accurate registration, it is a good idea to make sure your linoleum block is square on one corner for registration during printing. WOOD: For easier carving, use Shina plywood, which is a softer plywood and allows for easy cutting across the grain. A dense, tight-grained wood such as cherry, maple or birch also works but requires more effort to carve (especially across the grain). It can be solid wood or plywood as long as it’s flat and even. The benefit to a harder wood is that it will withstand more printing with a press and will retain very fine detail better. -
National Register of Historic Places Registration Form NPS Form 10-900 OMB No
United States Department of the Interior National Park Service / National Register of Historic Places Registration Form NPS Form 10-900 OMB No. 1024-0018 (Expires 5/31/2012) Washington State Library Thurston County, WA Name of Property County and State United States Department of the Interior National Park Service National Register of Historic Places Registration Form This form is for use in nominating or requesting determinations for individual properties and districts. See instructions in National Register Bulletin, How to Complete the National Register of Historic Places Registration Form. If any item does not apply to the property being documented, enter “N/A” for “not applicable.” For functions, architectural classification, materials, and areas of significance, enter only categories and subcategories from the instructions. Place additional certification comments, entries, and narrative items on continuation sheets if needed (NPS Form 10-900a). 1. Name of Property historic name Washington State Library other names/site number Joel M. Pritchard Building 2. Location th street and 415 15 Avenue Southeast not for publication number city or town Olympia vicinity state Washington code WA county Thurston code 067 zip code 98501 3. State/Federal Agency Certification As the designated authority under the National Historic Preservation Act, as amended, I hereby certify that this nomination request for determination of eligibility meets the documentation standards for registering properties in the National Register of Historic Places and meets the procedural and professional requirements set forth in 36 CFR Part 60. In my opinion, the property _ meets _ does not meet the National Register Criteria. I recommend that this property be considered significant at the following level(s) of significance: local Applicable National Register Criteria A C Signature of certifying official/Title Date WASHINGTON SHPO State or Federal agency/bureau or Tribal Government In my opinion, the property meets does not meet the National Register criteria. -
Open Etoth Dissertation Corrected.Pdf
The Pennsylvania State University The Graduate School The College of Arts and Architecture FROM ACTIVISM TO KIETISM: MODERIST SPACES I HUGARIA ART, 1918-1930 BUDAPEST – VIEA – BERLI A Dissertation in Art History by Edit Tóth © 2010 Edit Tóth Submitted in Partial Fulfillment of the Requirements for the Degree of Doctor of Philosophy May 2010 The dissertation of Edit Tóth was reviewed and approved* by the following: Nancy Locke Associate Professor of Art History Dissertation Adviser Chair of Committee Sarah K. Rich Associate Professor of Art History Craig Zabel Head of the Department of Art History Michael Bernhard Associate Professor of Political Science *Signatures are on file in the Graduate School ii ABSTRACT From Activism to Kinetism: Modernist Spaces in Hungarian Art, 1918-1930. Budapest – Vienna – Berlin investigates modernist art created in Central Europe of that period, as it responded to the shock effects of modernity. In this endeavor it takes artists directly or indirectly associated with the MA (“Today,” 1916-1925) Hungarian artistic and literary circle and periodical as paradigmatic of this response. From the loose association of artists and literary men, connected more by their ideas than by a distinct style, I single out works by Lajos Kassák – writer, poet, artist, editor, and the main mover and guiding star of MA , – the painter Sándor Bortnyik, the polymath László Moholy- Nagy, and the designer Marcel Breuer. This exclusive selection is based on a particular agenda. First, it considers how the failure of a revolutionary reorganization of society during the Hungarian Soviet Republic (April 23 – August 1, 1919) at the end of World War I prompted the Hungarian Activists to reassess their lofty political ideals in exile and make compromises if they wanted to remain in the vanguard of modernity. -
Web Usage Mining & Personalization in Noisy, Dynamic, and Ambiguous
Web Usage Mining & Personalization in Noisy, Dynamic, and Ambiguous Environments Olfa Nasraoui Knowledge Discovery & Web Mining Lab Dept of Computer Engineering & Computer Sciences University of Louisville E-mail: [email protected] URL: http://www.louisville.edu/~o0nasr01 Supported by US National Science Foundation Career Award IIS-0133948 Nasraoui: Web Usage Mining & Personalization in Noisy, Dynamic, and Ambiguous Environments Compressed Vita • Endowed Chair of E-commerce in the Department of Computer Engineering & Computer Science at the University of Louisville • Director of the Knowledge Discovery and Web Mining Lab at the University of Louisville. • Research activities include Data Mining, Web mining, Web Personalization, and Computational Intelligence (Applications of evolutionary computation and fuzzy set theory). • Served as program co-chair for several conferences & workshops, including WebKDD 2004, 2005, and 2006 workshops on Web Mining and Web Usage Analysis, held in conjunction with ACM SIGKDD International Conferences on Knowledge Discovery and Data Mining (KDD). • Recipient of US National Science Foundation CAREER Award. • What I will speak about today is mainly the research products and lessons from a 5-year US National Science Foundation project Nasraoui: Web Usage Mining & Personalization in Noisy, Dynamic, and Ambiguous Environments My Collaborative Network? Nasraoui: Web Usage Mining & Personalization in Noisy, Dynamic, and Ambiguous Environments Team: Knowledge Discovery & Web Mining Lab University of Louisville -
A Brainy Timber Heiress with a Passion for Sculpture, Virginia Wright
A brainy timber heiress with a passion for sculpture, Virginia Wright brought some of the nation’s best contemporary artists Museum Whatcom Jack Carver by (’40); courtesyPhoto to Western’s Outdoor Sculpture Collection By Sheila Farr (’94) Virginia Wright (right) poses with Mark di Suvero as he assembles “For Handel” in 1974. Wright bought the soaring I-beam sculpture for Western after losing out on a different di Suvero work that would eventually resurface at Dartmouth College. ow much art can you buy with a million bucks? Those are qualities that set that Virginia Wright and her late That was the question Virginia Wright faced in 1969, husband, Bagley, apart from the crowd and made them a power whenH her father, Northwest timber baron Prentice Bloedel, couple whose impact on this region’s cultural life began well gave her a million dollar endowment and a mandate to buy before Prentice Bloedel endowed the Virginia Wright Fund. public artworks for the region. Their work has since extended far beyond it. Mr. Bloedel’s gift came as a surprise: He didn’t really like For starters, Bagley Wright was president of Pentagram, the contemporary art. But he knew what made his daughter tick corporation that built that quirky tower for the 1962 Century – and that she had the passion, the knowledge and the connec- 21 World’s Fair. Who knew the Space Needle would become tions to make his investment a pretty safe bet. Seattle’s premier landmark? At a time when Seattle’s theatrical He was right. Since that time, the Virginia Wright Fund scene was nearly non-existent, Bagley helped found the Seattle has reshaped the landscape of Northwest art and provided the Repertory Theater and served as its first president. -
Fixed Fire Fighting and Emergency Ventilation Systems for Highway Tunnels – Literature Survey and Synthesis
FIXED FIRE FIGHTING AND EMERGENCY VENTILATION SYSTEMS FOR HIGHWAY TUNNELS – LITERATURE SURVEY AND SYNTHESIS FHWA-HIF-20-016 FFFS-EVS for Highway Tunnels – Literature Survey and Synthesis January 2020 Technical Report Documentation Page 1. Report No. 2. Government Accession No. 3. Recipient’s Catalog No. FHWA-HIF-20-016 TBA TBA 4. Title and Subtitle 5. Report Date Fixed Fire Fighting and Emergency Ventilation Systems January 2020 Literature Survey and Synthesis 6. Performing Organization Code TBA 7. Principal Investigator(s): 8. Performing Organization Bill Bergeson (FHWA), Matt Bilson (WSP), Bill Connell (WSP), Bobby Report Melvin (WSP), Katie McQuade-Jones (WSP) TBA 9. Performing Organization Name and Address 10. Work Unit No. (TRAIS) WSP USA, Inc. TBA One Penn Plaza th 250 West 34 Street 11. Contract or Grant No. New York, NY, 10119 DTFH6114D00048 12. Sponsoring Agency Name and Address 13. Type of Report and Period Federal Highway Administration Covered U.S. Department of Transportation TBA 1200 New Jersey Avenue, SE 14. Sponsoring Agency Code Washington, DC 20590 TBA 15. Supplementary Notes 16. Abstract There is a lot of global experience with fixed fire fighting systems in road tunnels, particularly in Australia and Japan, but also in several recently constructed tunnels in the United States and Europe. The U.S. first implemented FFFS in their tunnels in the 1950s, however, this approach did not become routine, partly due to unsuccessful tests of FFFS in the Offneg Tunnel in Europe. Because FFFS were not routinely applied in all tunnels, the present-day approach can vary between planned facilities and regions, especially in critical design areas such as operational integration with the emergency ventilation system (EVS). -
Seattle Center • 35 • 33 12 Hydraulis, Clark Wiegman Collection
A2 SEATTLE MARION OLIVER McCAW HALL CENTER 8 Dreaming in Color, Leni 9 An Equal and Opposite Schwendinger, 2003. Light Reaction, Sarah Sze, 2005. on large-scale mesh scrims. Mixed-media suspended SEATTLE REPERTORY FOUNDER’S COURT KREIELSHEIMER PROMENADE. sculpture. MARION OLIVER THEATRE MCCAW HALL LOBBY. 4 Encircled Stream, Ned 1 Neon for the Bagley Kahn, 1995. Anodized Wright Theatre, Stephen aluminum and granite water Antonakos, 1983. Neon feature. tubing. BAGLEY WRIGHT THEATRE, BUILDING FAÇADE. 5 Cairn from the Lang Fountain, Francois Stahly, CORNISH PLAYHOUSE 1962. Carved stone cairn. 2 Fountain of the Northwest, 6 Untitled, Horace James Fitzgerald, 1962. Washington, 1995. Cast Cast bronze fountain. bronze and granite PLAYHOUSE COURTYARD. medallions, cast concrete seating. 3 Barbet, James Washington Jr., 1964. Carved stone 7 Fu Dogs, artist unknown, sculpture. PLAYHOUSE COURTYARD 1963. Concrete sculptures. ENTRANCE. PACIFIC NORTHWEST BALLET ENTRANCE. ROY ST REPUBLICAN ST • 1 Seattle Repertory • 2, 3 MERCER ST Theatre Cornish Playhouse• 7 • 4-6 • 8 • 9 • 16 11 Pacific • • 10 • 15 Northwest Marion • 17 Ballet Oliver McCaw Key International Hall Arena • 12 Fountain • 13 • 18 Mercer Arena PHOTO: BILL MOHN/COURTESY OF SEATTLE OPERA. THOMAS ST AROUND KEYARENA • 14 Fisher Pavilion • 37 SEATTLE • 38 • 20 • 19 10 Fountain of Creation, 13 Acrobat Constellation, Armory CENTER • 22 • 24 Everett Dupen, 1962. Bronze Timothy Siciliano, 1995. Seattle • 25 • 39 • 36 KEYARENA NORTH COURT. Children’s • 27 sculptures. Aluminum and painted Theatre Monorail Chihuly • 28 steel sculptures. KEYARENA Garden 23 • 24 HARRISON ST 11 Play Ray Plaza, Vicki Scuri, EAST PLAZA. • and Glass EMP • 31 1995. Colored concrete and Pacific Space • 34 Needle stainless steel plaza. -
Jantar Mantar Strike Seeks a Sustainable Earth
STUDENT PAPER OF TIMES SCHOOL OF MEDIA GREATER NOiDA | MONDAY, OCTOBER 14, 2019 | VOL 3 , ISSUE 8 | PAGES 8 THE TIMESOF BENNETT Exploring a slice of Tibet in Delhi Trophy from the hunt Hip-hop: culture over trends The ISAC Walk 1.0 : Glimpses of Geeta Bisht, BU’s front desk executive, on Rapper’s take on today’s the photowalk to Majnu-ka-tilla winning the Super Model Hunt 2019 hip-hop industry | Page 5 | Page 4 | Page 6 BU hosts 1st inter-college sports fest, Expedite 2019 Silent walks to By ASHIMA CHOUDHARY were soul-stirring. As the the yum eateries. Even Zardicate came together was one to remember. took trophies, cash mon- Bennett University con- audience and athletes Mrs. Pratima was thrilled to mellow down the stress The crowd lit up the night ey and hampers home! fight harassment ducted its first-ever came together, the event to see the level of enthu- from the tournaments. with grooving students The stir caused by sports fest from 27th to electrified the atmosphere. siasm shown by students. The first night ended with and radium accessories. the fest was palpable as 29th of September. It Food stalls, to source In her words, “I expect- a bonfire, relaxing every- The DJ night lasted well Yashraj Saxena, former welcomed 400 students everyone’s energy, were ed it to be chaotic, but one, but it was the 28th, into the hours. Everyone head of the committee, from 16 universities from voiced his words, “We’ve the Delhi NCR region, been trying to host this Jaipur, Gwalior and a for the past two years. -
Fall 2013 / Winter 2014 Titles
INFLUENTIAL THINKERS INNOVATIVE IDEAS GRANTA PAYBACK THE WAYFINDERS RACE AGAINST TIME BECOMING HUMAN Margaret Atwood Wade Davis Stephen Lewis Jean Vanier Trade paperback / $18.95 Trade paperback / $19.95 Trade paperback / $19.95 Trade paperback / $19.95 ANANSIANANSIANANSI 978-0-88784-810-0 978-0-88784-842-1 978-0-88784-753-0 978-0-88784-809-4 PORTOBELLO e-book / $16.95 e-book / $16.95 e-book / $16.95 e-book / $16.95 978-0-88784-872-8 978-0-88784-969-5 978-0-88784-875-9 978-0-88784-845-2 A SHORT HISTORY THE TRUTH ABOUT THE UNIVERSE THE EDUCATED OF PROGRESS STORIES WITHIN IMAGINATION FALL 2013 / Ronald Wright Thomas King Neil Turok Northrop Frye Trade paperback / $19.95 Trade paperback / $19.95 Trade paperback / $19.95 Trade paperback / $14.95 978-0-88784-706-6 978-0-88784-696-0 978-1-77089-015-2 978-0-88784-598-7 e-book / $16.95 e-book / $16.95 e-book / $16.95 e-book / $14.95 WINTER 2014 978-0-88784-843-8 978-0-88784-895-7 978-1-77089-225-5 978-0-88784-881-0 ANANSI PUBLISHES VERY GOOD BOOKS WWW.HOUSEOFANANSI.COM Anansi_F13_cover.indd 1-2 13-05-15 11:51 AM HOUSE OF ANANSI FALL 2013 / WINTER 2014 TITLES SCOTT GRIFFIN Chair NONFICTION ... 1 SARAH MACLACHLAN President & Publisher FICTION ... 17 ALLAN IBARRA VP Finance ASTORIA (SHORT FICTION) ... 23 MATT WILLIAMS VP Publishing Operations ARACHNIDE (FRENCH TRANSLATION) ... 29 JANIE YOON Senior Editor, Nonfiction ANANSI INTERNATIONAL ... 35 JANICE ZAWERBNY Senior Editor, Canadian Fiction SPIDERLINE .. -
Modernism in the Pacific Northwest: the Mythic and the Mystical June 19 — September 7, 2014
Ann P. Wyckoff Teacher Resource Center Educator Resource List Modernism in the Pacific Northwest: The Mythic and the Mystical June 19 — September 7, 2014 BOOKS FOR STUDENTS A Community of Collectors: 75th Anniversary Gifts to the Seattle Art Museum. Chiyo Ishikawa, ed. Seattle: Seattle Adventures in Greater Puget Sound. Dawn Ashbach and Art Museum, 2008. OSZ N 745 S4 I84 Janice Veal. Anacortes, WA: Northwest Island Association, 1991. QH 105 W2 A84 Overview of recent acquisitions to SAM’s collection, including works by Northwest artists. Educational guide and activity book that explores the magic of marine life in the region. George Tsutakawa. Martha Kingsbury. Seattle: University of Washington Press, 1990. N 6537 T74 A4 Ancient Ones: The World of the Old–Growth Douglas Fir. Barbara Bash. San Francisco: Sierra Club Books for Exhibition catalogue covering 60 years of work of the Children, 2002. QK 494.5 P66 B37 Seattle–born painter, sculptor, and fountain maker. Traces the life cycle of the Douglas fir and the old–growth Kenneth Callahan. Thomas Orton and Patricia Grieve forest and their intricate web of life. Watkinson. Seattle : University of Washington Press; 2000. ND 237 C3 O77 Larry Gets Lost in Seattle. John Skewes. Seattle: Sasquatch Books, 2007. F 899 S44 S5 Overview of the life and work of artist Kenneth Callahan. Pete looks for his dog Larry in Seattle’s famous attractions. Margaret Callahan: Mother of Northwest Art. Margaret Bundy Callahan and Brian Tobey Callahan, ed. Victoria, S Is for Salmon: A Pacific Northwest Alphabet. Hannah BC: Trafford Publising, 2009. ND 237 C19 C35 Viano. -
Modern and Contemporary Sculpture Outreach Suitcase
Ann P. Wyckoff Teacher Resource Center Outreach Suitcases Places, Spaces, and Faces: Modern and Contemporary Sculpture Outreach Suitcase “The materials immediately inspired great creativity . and the Educator Resource Guide inspired me to create an accordion-book project. Thanks for the supplies and inspiration.” —Elementary Parent Art Docent ABOUT THE SUITCASE The Places, Spaces, and Faces suitcase is a resource for examining modern sculpture from the late nineteenth century to the contemporary period, emphasizing objects from the collections of SAM. These objects are intended to inspire artistic creation by students and provide an interactive approach to sculpture, including exploration of materials, techniques, meaning, and history. By using these objects, students can explore not only the formal and expressive elements of sculpture, but also how sculpture conveys social concerns and issues of identity. Book this suitcase online at www.seattleartmuseum.org/programs-and-learning/schools-and-educators/teacher- resource-center/suitcases. LOOKING QUESTIONS Encourage your students to look closely at the objects in the suitcase and images from SAM’s Collection with questions like: • Describe what you see in this sculpture. How does it make you feel? • If these works were to come to life, what might they do or how would they move? • What kind of personalities would they have and why? Ann P. Wyckoff Teacher Resource Center Outreach Suitcases WHAT’S IN THE MODERN AND CONTEMPORARY SCULPTURE OUTREACH SUITCASE? Educator Resource Guide • Octave, -
Oral History Interview with George Tsutakawa [Videorecording]
Oral history interview with George Tsutakawa [videorecording] Funding for this interview was provided by Warner Communications. Archives of American Art 750 9th Street, NW Victor Building, Suite 2200 Washington, D.C. 20001 https://www.aaa.si.edu/services/questions https://www.aaa.si.edu/ Table of Contents Collection Overview ........................................................................................................ 1 Administrative Information .............................................................................................. 1 General............................................................................................................................. 2 Scope and Contents........................................................................................................ 2 Scope and Contents........................................................................................................ 2 Biographical / Historical.................................................................................................... 1 Names and Subjects ...................................................................................................... 2 Container Listing ...................................................................................................... Oral history interview with George Tsutakawa AAA.tsutak87 Collection Overview Repository: Archives of American Art Title: Oral history interview with George Tsutakawa Identifier: AAA.tsutak87 Date: 1987 June 26-27 Creator: Tsutakawa, George Tsutakawa,