Help


[permalink] [id link]
+
Page "Southeastern Center for Contemporary Art" ¶ 1
from Wikipedia
Edit
Promote Demote Fragment Fix

Some Related Sentences

By and fostering
By fostering the involvement of individuals, companies and organizations in his spaceflight, Richard hoped to demonstrate that there is commercial potential in private space exploration, while furthering the understanding of space.
By fostering learners ’ critical reflection and experience in discourse, autonomous thinking is possible.
By 1890, electric streetcar lines were replacing horse-drawn ones in cities of all sizes, allowing the lines to be extended and fostering a tremendous amount of suburban development.
By nurturing creativity and fostering innovation societies will maintain cultural diversity and enhance economic performance.
By fostering its development, Apple and IBM sought to maintain their own position in the software development arena at a time when Microsoft ’ s power was rising.
By contrast, a fostering strategy generally involves taking an " integrative " or win-win approach to the negotiations, combined with a " consensus " approach to internal relations in both sides, and an attitudinal approach that emphasizes openness and understanding.
By fostering cross-cultural exchange and creative dialogue, and by encouraging exploration of areas in new music seldom touched upon by mainstream music institutions, Other Minds is committed to expanding and reshaping the definition of what constitutes " serious music .".
By fostering an interest in the study of applied mathematics, the competition contributed towards the success in mathematical physics that was to become the hallmark of Cambridge mathematics during the second half of the nineteenth century.
By fostering competitive meetings and by his writings, especially in Y Traethodydd, a quarterly magazine which he founded in 1845 and edited for ten years, he did much to inform and educate his countrymen on literary and theological subjects.
By fostering the growth of television production in Canada through financial investment and industry research, the Canadian Television Fund ( CTF ) supports the development of Canadian talent, programs and audiences.

By and creative
By 1900 the advertising agency had become the focal point of creative planning, and advertising was firmly established as a profession.
By simply denying that an efficient first cause is problematic, being easily explained as the creative action of an omnipotent God, medieval theologians re-purposed and enhanced Aristotle's argument, as if the intention had been to prove God's existence.
" By exchanging limited exclusive rights for disclosure of inventions and creative works, society and the patentee / copyright owner mutually benefit, and an incentive is created for inventors and authors to create and disclose their work.
Along with her friend Kendra Voth, Kreuk established " Girls By Design ," a project to empower teenage girls through creative and educational endeavors.
The one where Chester sings and writes is Dead By Sunrise, but when I sing, and Amir and I are the primary writers, it becomes Julien-K and it's more electro and much darker ... Julien-K and Dead by Sunrise are basically a creative collective, we're sort of a Warhol-style factory in that sense ... Dead by Sunrise is Chester's Julien-K if that makes any sense "
By some estimates, approximately 10 million US workers are creative professionals ; depending upon the depth and breadth of the definition, this estimate may be double.
By the late 1960s, many corps wanted more creative freedom and better financial compensation than was offered by their sponsors.
By the time he was elected director of the Saint Petersburg Conservatory in 1905, he was at the height of his creative powers.
By preserving source referencing, and abstracting the creative decisions that are made, AAF tries to improve workflow and simplify project management.
By seeing conflict as a creative opportunity, collaborators willingly invest time and resources into finding a “ win-win ” solution.
Television Heaven's review concluded by saying, " By turns amusing, aware, suspenseful, exciting and imaginative, ' Dark Season ' stands as an almost criminally overlooked example of children's genre television of the highest quality, and also as an early indication of a future major creative talent in the form of Russell T Davies taking his first steps on the long and winding creative road to a glittering future.
By the late 1970s the revolutionary climate had subsided and the need to express political militancy through song was no longer felt by poets, composers and singers, who subsequently redefined both their role and their creative contribution.
By the time comic books came of age in the 1940s, the huge volume of work demanded by publishers had encouraged an assembly-line process, dividing the creative process into distinct tasks: writer, penciller, letterer, inker, and colorist.
By exploring the relationship between art and science, and between creation, invention, and discovery, Engel provides unusual insights on the craft medium which has strict inherent constraints in favouring simple, geometric patterns and yet holds enough creative possibility within it to capture an unexpected range of complex forms.
By the late 1990s, Columbia City was already referred to as one of Seattle's most creative neighborhoods.
By far the most high-profile member of the creative team, the series is often referred to as " Peter Madsen's Valhalla ".
By encouraging an individual to address a problem in a creative way, reacting spontaneously and based on impulse, they may begin to discover new solutions to problems in their lives and learn new roles they can inhabit within it.
By this time, Chadwick was a highly-regarded elder musician who was no longer writing as the energetically creative artist.
By early 1994, Ó Maonlaí had decided that the group was suffering from physical, mental and creative exhaustion, and he called for a year-long sabbatical.
By the time an official deal with Crawford was announced, by now downgraded to a yearlong contract in the role rather than three, he had been pulling his weight in the creative control department ; as Sonenberg put it, " has been working with us the last several months on input on the book.
By developing new, creative, non-partisan, and world-class ideas and solutions, we believe we can contribute to improved outcomes for all New Zealanders.
By the mid-1960s, Davis was in charge of the A & R and creative departments at Chess Records, supervising the in-house songwriters and producers.
By devoting time to writing the Apology, Hardy was admitting that his own time as a creative mathematician was finished.
By recognizing the dual nature of glocalization, hip-hop ’ s role within Israeli society can be revealed to show its nature of meshing opposing forces to form a creative and original product.

By and excellence
By applying sprezzatura to his speech and everything else he does, the courtier appears to have grazia and impresses his audience, thereby achieving excellence and perfection.
By these means he succeeded in perfecting himself, and was through his moral excellence united with God ; having attained to unity and sameness of will and energy ( i. e. activity ) with Him through his advances in the path of good deeds.
By a combination of artistic excellence and quiet husbandry, including a year-long Complete Works of Shakespeare Festival ( begun in April 2006 in collaboration with other theatre companies ) plus a financially successful London season at the Novello Theatre in 2006, Boyd slowly rebuilt the company's fortunes and reputation.
By 1455, the Venezian navigator, Luís de Cadamosto, on visiting Madeira, referred to the excellence of the Madeirense wines, principally the Malvasia castes from the island of Crete, which were being exported in greater numbers.
By the Renaissance, Roscius formed the paradigm for dramatic excellence.
By making the aretaic turn in legal theory, virtue jurisprudence focuses on the importance of character and human excellence or virtue to questions about the nature of law, the content of the law, and judging.
By 1818 he showed " the highest judicial excellence ", although he was criticised for snapping at boring barristers and for taking the government's side in prosecutions.
By 1992, these colleges were recognised as centres of excellence in their areas of specialism and following the establishment of the Institute, their expertise formed the nucleus of the Faculty structure within DIT today and were renamed aptly:
By 2002, Blue's Clues had received several awards for excellence in children's programming, educational software, and licensing, and had been nominated for nine Emmy Awards.
" By 2014-15, CSU Bakersfield will be the leading campus in the CSU system in terms of faculty and academic excellence and diversity, quality of the student experience, and community engagement.
" By America's entry into the Vietnam War, the green beret had become a symbol of excellence throughout the US Army.
By 1921, the Seminary had gained a reputation for excellence, when Dr. John W. Long took office as its ninth president.
By 1614 she was the court's most highly paid musician, in no small part because her musical virtuosity so well exemplified an idea of female excellence projected by Tuscany's de facto Regent, Granduchess Christina of Lorraine.
By means of such drive to excellence, soon the School of Medicine of Ribeirão Preto achieved prominence and a unique status in Brazil.
By the end of the 1950s, Covent Garden was generally regarded as approaching the excellence of the world's greatest opera companies.
By this time he had already acquired some international fame, as evidenced by the appearance of his name in a list of " contemporary composers of excellence " in a manuscript copy of the Penitential Psalms of Orlande de Lassus, which were probably composed in the 1560s in Munich.
By combining the theory and practice of collaborative community ministry into a program of urban theological education, the MUI prepares students for excellence in any context of ministry.
By February 2006, that rating had risen to 47 % ( Chandler Public Relations ), the highest excellence rating of any city of 50, 000 residents or larger in Arizona.
By the means of honesty, loyalty, respect, open mindedness, leadership and academic excellence, sisters carry forth the vision of these eighteen women.
By, Sandberg was past his prime and Thompson finally received recognition when he won the Gold Glove Award for fielding excellence and the Silver Slugger Award, which is awarded annually to the best offensive player at each position.

3.220 seconds.