Results 181 to 190 of about 1,564 (243)
Finding value and beauty in obsolete scientific equipment. [PDF]
Smith DR.
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Investigation of Polymer Adhesion of Materials in Multimaterial FFF Process. [PDF]
Seregi BL, Ficzere P, Zsoldos G.
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2012
Abstract A recent thought concerning Aegean prehistoric figurines was penned by Colin Renfrew. The trajectory of Renfrew's scholarship parallels the trends in the study of Aegean Bronze Age figurines. In 1969, he produced the typological sequence of Early Cycladic figurines.
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Abstract A recent thought concerning Aegean prehistoric figurines was penned by Colin Renfrew. The trajectory of Renfrew's scholarship parallels the trends in the study of Aegean Bronze Age figurines. In 1969, he produced the typological sequence of Early Cycladic figurines.
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Journal of Material Culture, 2001
How are we to understand the many-stranded, even contradictory, ways an artifact projects an ethnic image across the space of the contact zone? A staple of souvenir shops in German-American tourist towns and the focus of an entire museum in Texas, diminutive porcelain Hummel figurines have been selling an image of Germany to a world audience since ...
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How are we to understand the many-stranded, even contradictory, ways an artifact projects an ethnic image across the space of the contact zone? A staple of souvenir shops in German-American tourist towns and the focus of an entire museum in Texas, diminutive porcelain Hummel figurines have been selling an image of Germany to a world audience since ...
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2017
Figurative art developed in the Maltese islands during the Neolithic, as part of the Temple Culture that flourished c.3500–2500 bc. Anthropomorphic and zoomorphic figurines, carved from stone or modelled in terracotta represented, not only a distinct Maltese identity but also significant artistic competence.
Caroline Malone, Simon Stoddart
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Figurative art developed in the Maltese islands during the Neolithic, as part of the Temple Culture that flourished c.3500–2500 bc. Anthropomorphic and zoomorphic figurines, carved from stone or modelled in terracotta represented, not only a distinct Maltese identity but also significant artistic competence.
Caroline Malone, Simon Stoddart
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Performance Research, 2006
Day Of The Figurines (DOTF) is set in a fictional town that is littered, dark and underpinned with steady decay.
Matt Adams, Scott Delahunta
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Day Of The Figurines (DOTF) is set in a fictional town that is littered, dark and underpinned with steady decay.
Matt Adams, Scott Delahunta
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Antiquity, 2020
For 50 years, Peter Ucko's Anthropomorphic figurines (1968) has served as an entry-point for anyone approaching the study of figurines: this new Oxford handbook now provides a broader alternative, which conveniently summarises much current evidence and thinking.
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For 50 years, Peter Ucko's Anthropomorphic figurines (1968) has served as an entry-point for anyone approaching the study of figurines: this new Oxford handbook now provides a broader alternative, which conveniently summarises much current evidence and thinking.
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International Journal of Cardiology, 2006
I read with interest the recent letter by entitled ‘‘Obesity, Hippocrates and Venus of Willendorf’’ [1] and wished to add some comments about the interpretation of the group of figures termed collectively ‘‘Venus figurines’’. Found throughout Upper Paleolithic Europe, the so-called ‘‘Venus figurines’’, of which the Willendorf Venus is a famous example,
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I read with interest the recent letter by entitled ‘‘Obesity, Hippocrates and Venus of Willendorf’’ [1] and wished to add some comments about the interpretation of the group of figures termed collectively ‘‘Venus figurines’’. Found throughout Upper Paleolithic Europe, the so-called ‘‘Venus figurines’’, of which the Willendorf Venus is a famous example,
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