Results 141 to 150 of about 29,979 (294)
Contextualizing the Cappella Cesi: Sangallo, Façades, and Renaissance Collaboration
Abstract This article reframes Antonio da Sangallo the Younger's oft‐overlooked cappella Cesi nave façade in Santa Maria della Pace not as an isolated design deviation but as part of a broader architectural and artistic conversation among major players in early sixteenth‐century Rome.
Alexis Culotta
wiley +1 more source
Dead time, hard time, and narrative redemption: Delimiting the life proper
Abstract Is every detail of your life a candidate for the meaningful, valuable, or worthwhile? If not, which do you exclude? Thaddeus Metz nominates “dead time”: the nail‐clipping, line‐waiting, traffic‐jam enduring, generally commonplace moments of our life. Dead time, while prevalent, is not remarkable. Metz recommends that we set at least some of it
Kathy Behrendt
wiley +1 more source
ABSTRACT This paper focuses on how street‐level bureaucrats understand and manage information in their interactions with clients in the context of so‐called open‐book services, where digital tools make it possible for clients to easily access documentation conventionally viewed as internal work material for professionals' eyes only.
Jesper Petersson, Christel Backman
wiley +1 more source
Artefact Profiling: Panomics Approaches for Understanding the Materiality of Written Artefacts. [PDF]
Creydt M, Fischer M.
europepmc +1 more source
Traces of Intentionality: Balance, Complexity, and Organization in Artworks by Humans and Apes
Abstract Are people able to tell apart a random configuration of lines and dots from a work of art? Previous studies have shown that untrained viewers can distinguish between abstract art made by professional artists, children, or apes. Pieces made by artists were perceived as more intentionally made and organized than the rest.
Larissa M. Straffon +3 more
wiley +1 more source
The Epistemic Value of Affective Disruptability. [PDF]
von Maur I.
europepmc +1 more source
Green Refrontierisation: Critical Cartographies of the Hydrogen Rush in Africa
Short Abstract This article provides a critical cartographic analysis of the green hydrogen (GH2) maps present within the reports of European states, lobby groups and investment bodies to examine the role of geographical knowledge in the production of low‐carbon energy frontiers. It identifies three spatio‐political strategies present within these maps
William Monteith
wiley +1 more source
Secondary ion mass spectrometry, a powerful tool for revealing ink formulations and animal skins in medieval manuscripts. [PDF]
Gravis D +6 more
europepmc +1 more source

